Tagged with News …

Sky News with Anna Jones - Sky Sports - Netflix

Sky Sports is a group of sports television channels operated by the
satellite pay-TV company Sky plc. Sky Sports is the dominant
subscription television sports brand in the United Kingdom and Ireland.
It has played a major role in the increased commercialisation of British
sport since 1991, sometimes playing a large role in inducing
organisational changes in the sports it broadcasts, most notably when it
encouraged the Premier League to break away from the Football League in
1992. Sky Sports Main Event, Premier League, Football, Cricket, Golf,
F1, Action and Arena are available as a premium package on top of the
basic Sky package. These channels are also available as premium channels
on nearly every satellite, cable and IPTV broadcasting system in the UK
and Ireland. Sky Sports News and Sky Sports Mix are both provided as
part of basic packages. The Sky Sports network is managed by Barney
Francis.

Sky News with Anna Jones - Sky Sports HD channels - Netflix

Sky Sports 1 HD launched on 22 May 2006 as Sky Sports HD, and airs live
cricket, Premier League and The Football League as well as English
Premiership and Super League Rugby. The 2008 Ryder Cup was also screened
in HD. In July 2006, Sky Sports HD2 launched on Sky Digital channel 409,
at the same time Sky Sports HD1 moved to channel 408, with Sky Sports
News switching to channel 405. There was also a HD version of PremPlus,
called PremPlus HD, which broadcast on Sky channel 483 until the
football season ended. It was briefly branded Sky Sports HDX and used to
broadcast other Sky Sports content in HD, before it ceased broadcasting.
HD broadcasts of rugby league's Super League began from the start of the
2007 season in February 2007. Super Bowl XLI marked the first NFL
broadcast in HD in the UK; additional NFL games in HD have since been
phased in. Monday Night Football, Thursday Night Football, Thanksgiving
Day games and the NFL Playoffs were shown in HD from 2008. Sky Sports
HD3 launched on 17 March 2008, to coincide with WWE's first UK HD
broadcast. The channel broadcasts a large quantity of WWE and golf. Sky
Sports HD4 launched on 29 April 2010. Due to an Ofcom review of premium
services, Sky Sports HD1 and HD2 launched on the Virgin Media platform
on 2 August 2010. This marked the first time that Sky's HD programming
was shown via a rival service. Smallworld Cable added Sky Sports HD1 and
HD2 in the first quarter of 2012. UPC Ireland added Sky Sports 1 HD and
2 HD along with Sky Sports News HD on 16 August 2012. Sky Sports News HD
launched on 23 August 2010. It was rebranded as Sky Sports News HQ HD on
12 August 2014 along with the standard channel. On 1 March 2012, the HD
channels were given a minor rebrand, with the 'HD' moving to the end of
the channel names, for example Sky Sports 1 HD instead of Sky Sports
HD1. Sky Sports F1 HD launched on 9 March 2012. Sky Sports 2 HD was also
rebranded to 'Sky Sports Ashes HD' in the same move used for the
standard channel on 30 June until 31 August 2013. Sky Sports 4 HD was
also rebranded to 'Sky Sports Ryder Cup HD' in the same move used for
the standard channel on 18 September 2014 until 2 October 2014. Sky
Sports 3 HD, Sky Sports 4 HD and Sky Sports F1 HD launched on Virgin
Media on 15 July 2014. Sky Sports 5 HD launched on 12 August 2014 as
well as being added on Virgin Media. Sky Sports 3, 4 and 5 HD launched
on Virgin Media Ireland on 15 October 2014. On 1 January 2015, Sky
Sports News HQ HD, along with Sky News HD were added on Virgin.

A talk show which introduces the viewer to the most fascinating people
in London and members of parliament.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 60 minutes

Premier: 2016-01-04

London Real - Daniel S. Peña Sr. - Netflix

Daniel Steven Peña Sr. (born August 10, 1945), also known as Dan Peña,
is an American businessman and business coach. He resides at Guthrie
Castle in Scotland, in which he previously operated a wedding business.

London Real - Political Positions - Netflix

Peña is a vocal supporter of Donald Trump and a skeptic of climate
change science.

BBC News at Five provides in-depth discussions and analysis of the
latest breaking news with Huw Edwards or Gavin Esler.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 60 minutes

Premier: 2006-04-03

BBC News at Five - BBC News at Five - Netflix

The BBC News at Five is an hour-long daily news programme broadcast at
17:00 on BBC News. The programme is fronted by BBC News at Ten presenter
Huw Edwards, the BBC's lead presenter for major breaking news, from
Monday to Thursday and Jane Hill on Friday. The show includes a detailed
look at the news, as well as analysis with guests and sport and weather
updates. Unlike most other BBC News Channel bulletins, the BBC News at
Five is presented from Studio C, which is usually the main studio for
BBC World News.

BBC News at Five - History - Netflix

The programme started on 3 April 2006 as part of the BBC's relaunch of
BBC News presenters, which saw the introduction of the new flagship
programme to compete against Jeremy Thompson's Live at Five programme on
rival channel Sky News, and to improve BBC News ratings for the hour. As
part of the 2008 revamp of the entire news output, the show moved
studios within BBC Television Centre along with BBC News and the BBC
News at One and BBC News at Ten bulletins. The show originally broadcast
from Studio N8 but moved to Studio N6. On 18 March 2013, the programme
moved to Broadcasting House along with BBC News and the BBC One
bulletins. On 4 November 2013, the BBC News at Five received new opening
titles featuring the hour of broadcast.

Bernard Ponsonby anchors STV's coverage of the outcome of the 2017
General Election. The programme starts with a UK-wide exit poll, giving
the first prediction of the result. With live links across the length
and breadth of Scotland, correspondents report from key Scottish seats
as the shape of the new parliament unfolds. Viewers will also be brought
important declarations and developments from other parts of the UK, with
interviews and reaction from senior politicians and expert analysts.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 485 minutes

Premier: 2017-06-08

Election - Chief Election Commissioner of India - Netflix

The Chief Election Commissioner heads the Election Commission of India,
a body constitutionally empowered to conduct free and fair elections to
the national and state legislatures and of President and Vice-President.
Chief Election Commissioner of India is usually a member of the Indian
Civil Service and mostly from the Indian Administrative Service. It is
very difficult to remove the authority of the Chief Election
Commissioner once appointed by the president, as two-thirds of the Lok
Sabha and the Rajya Sabha need to vote against him for disorderly
conduct or improper actions. Despite the recent changes in the
hierarchy, the system always had powers to impose unambiguous rules and
guidelines that applied across the entire nation e.g. as to how the
ballots will be cast and counted, what will be regarded as 'unqualified'
vote. India was probably one of the first countries in the World to go
for a completely electronic ballot in the last elections. What made this
remarkable was that the Election Commission of India had successfully
implemented this across the entire diverse Indian population that also
consisted of the rural illiterate people. While the office has always
been an important one in the machinery of the Indian political process,
it gained significant public attention during the tenure of T.N. Seshan,
from 1990 to 1996. Seshan is widely credited with undertaking a zealous
effort to end corruption and manipulation in Indian elections. Though he
made significant progress, several politicians attempted to derail these
efforts. In particular, the expansion of the Election Commission to
include the two Election Commissioners (in addition to the Chief
Commissioner) was seen as a move to curtail the commissioner's ability
to act aggressively.

Election - Suggested reforms - Netflix

In June 2012, Lal Krishna Advani, a veteran Indian politician and former
Deputy Prime Minister of India (as well as former Leader of the
Opposition in Indian Parliament), suggested that appointment of CEC (as
well as the Comptroller and Auditor General of India (CAG)) should be
made by a bipartisan collegium consisting of the Prime Minister, the
Chief Justice, the Law Minister and the Leaders of the Opposition in the
Lok Sabha and the Rajya Sabha. Subsequently, M Karunanidhi, the head of
Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) party and five times Chief Minister of
Tamil Nadu supported the suggestion. Advani made this demand to remove
any impression of bias or lack of transparency and fairness because,
according to him, the current system was open to “manipulation and
partisanship”. Similar demand was made by many former CEC's such as B B
Tandon, N Gopalaswamy and S Y Quraishi.

A comprehensive round-up of the football headlines and all the day's
sports news.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 120 minutes

Premier: 2016-09-07

News HQ - America's News Headquarters - Netflix

America's News Headquarters (seen on air as America's News HQ) is a
daily news program broadcast on Fox News Channel; it also refers to the
two- to three-minute headline updates during “non-news” programming. The
show took the place of America's Election Headquarters. The term “News
HQ” (and later “America's HQ”) is seen on the bottom of the rotating Fox
News Channel logo (on the left hand side) after the Election season.
America's News HQ follows the same format as its predecessor, Fox News
Live. The weekday edition of America's News HQ was replaced on the
schedule with The Daily Briefing with Dana Perino on October 2, 2017.

News HQ - History - Netflix

The former weekday 5:00 p.m. ET broadcast was hosted at various
intervals by Jane Skinner, Heather Nauert, Jon Scott, Martha MacCallum,
Bill Hemmer, and Megyn Kelly. On January 19, 2009, Glenn Beck took over
this time slot when he began hosting a self-titled show, The Glenn Beck
Program. America's News HQ continued airing on the weekends. On May 2,
2009, the program broadcasting from the network's New York City studios
launched in high-definition (HD). On October 3, 2009, the program
broadcasting from the Fox News' Washington, D.C. studios also launched
in HD. The weekday edition was relaunched following the 2016 U.S.
presidential election, taking the same 2:00 p.m. ET time slot previously
held by America's Election Headquarters. Melissa Francis - formerly a
semi regular co-host of Outnumbered - has become the most frequent host
of the weekday version of the show. The show currently broadcasts
Saturdays from 12:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. and 4:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. On
Sunday it airs from 12:00 p.m. to 2:00 p.m. and 4:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.

#@)₴?$0 з Майклом Щуром - Late-night talk show - Netflix

A late-night talk show is a genre of talk show popular in the United
States, where the format originated. It is generally structured around
humorous monologues about the day's news, guest interviews, comedy
sketches and music performances. The late-night talk show format was
popularized, though not invented, by Johnny Carson with The Tonight Show
Starring Johnny Carson on NBC. Typically the show's host conducts
interviews from behind a desk, while the guest is seated on a couch.
Many late night talk shows feature a house band which generally performs
cover songs for the studio audience during commercial breaks and
occasionally will back up a guest artist. Late-night talk shows are a
popular format in the United States, but are not as prominent in other
parts of the world. Shows that loosely resemble the format air in other
countries, but generally air weekly as opposed to the nightly airings of
those in the United States. They also generally air in time slots
considered to be prime time in the United States.

#@)₴?$0 з Майклом Щуром - 1940s–1960s - Netflix

Late-night talk shows had their genesis in early variety shows, a format
that migrated to television from radio, where it had been the dominant
form of light entertainment during most of the old-time radio era. The
Pepsodent Show, which opened each weekly episode with host Bob Hope's
rapid-fire, topical and often political observational comedy, was a
particularly important predecessor to the late-night format. Early
television variety shows included The Ed Sullivan Show (originally known
as Toast of the Town), which aired on CBS Sunday nights from 1948 to
1971 and was hosted by Ed Sullivan, and Texaco Star Theater with Milton
Berle, which aired on NBC from 1948 to 1956. These shows aired once a
week in evening time slots that would come to be known as prime time.
The first show to air in a late night time slot itself, Broadway Open
House, aired on NBC in 1950 and ended a year later after host Jerry
Lester left the show, infuriated at being upstaged by his sidekick
Virginia “Dagmar” Lewis. (As it was, there were also not yet enough
television sets in the United States to make television broadcasting in
late-night viable; Lester himself was a last-minute replacement host for
up-and-coming 26-year-old comic Don Hornsby, who caught polio and died
less than a week before the show began.) The first version of The
Tonight Show, Tonight Starring Steve Allen, debuted in 1954 on NBC. The
show created many modern talk show staples included an opening
monologue, celebrity interviews, audience participation, comedy bits,
and musical performances. By this point, the Federal Communications
Commission had lifted a freeze on new television stations, which allowed
new stations to pop up across the country, and television adoption soon
grew exponentially. As a result, unlike Broadway Open House, Tonight
proved to be a resounding success. The success of the show led Allen to
get another show, entitled The Steve Allen Show, which would compete
with The Ed Sullivan Show on Sunday nights. Meanwhile, hosting duties of
The Tonight Show were split between Allen and Ernie Kovacs; Kovacs had
defected to NBC from his own late-night show on the then-crumbling
DuMont Television Network. Both Allen and Kovacs departed from Tonight
in 1957 in order to focus on Allen's Sunday night show. After the two
left, the format changed similar to that of Today and was renamed
Tonight! America After Dark and was hosted first by Jack Lescoulie and
then by Al Collins while interviews were performed by Hy Gardner, and a
house band led by Lou Stein. The show was not popular leading to many
NBC affiliates dropping the show. The show returned to the original
format that year and was renamed Tonight Starring Jack Paar, with Jack
Paar assuming hosting duties. The even greater success of the show
during Paar's hosting resulted in many NBC affiliates re-airing the
show. He was noted for his conversational style, relatively highbrow
interview guests, feuds with other media personalities (his feuds with
print journalists Ed Sullivan and Walter Winchell marked a power shift
from print to television; Winchell's career never recovered from the
damage), and mercurial personality; Paar famously quit the show in 1960
in a dispute over a censored joke but was allowed to come back a month
later. Paar permanently left the show in 1962, citing the reason that he
could not handle the work load of The Tonight Show (at the time, the
show ran 105 minutes a day, five days a week), and he moved to his own
weekly prime-time show, which would run until 1965. After Paar's
departure, hosting duties were filled by Groucho Marx, Mort Sahl and
many others. Longtime guest host Johnny Carson took over as host of The
Tonight Show in 1962 and the show was renamed The Tonight Show Starring
Johnny Carson. Carson streamlined the format of the show, focusing more
on entertainment personalities, tweaking the monologue to include more
shorter jokes, and emphasizing sketch comedy. Ed McMahon served as
Carson's announcer while from 1962 to 1966 the band was led by Skitch
Henderson, who hired, among others, Doc Severinsen. When Henderson left,
Milton DeLugg took over. Severinsen took over in 1967, and served as
bandleader with the NBC Orchestra. The show originated from NBC Studios
in New York City but, as part of Carson's shifting the show toward a
more entertainment-oriented program, moved to Burbank, California in
1972. NBC's two other rivals during the early television era, CBS and
ABC, did not attempt any major forays into late-night television until
the 1960s. ABC's first effort at late-night TV was hosted by Les Crane,
which pioneered the controversial tabloid talk show format that would
not become popular until two decades later. Crane's show lasted only six
months. Shorter still was The Las Vegas Show, a Las Vegas-based
late-night show hosted by Bill Dana that was the only offering of the
United Network that ever made it to air (because that network only had a
handful of affiliates, it also syndicated to CBS, ABC and independent
stations); it, along with the network, only lasted five weeks in summer
1967. Steve Allen himself returned to late-night in syndication twice in
this time frame, first with a show that ran from 1962 to 1964 and then
with a series that ran from 1968 to 1971. ABC added the Joey Bishop Show
to its late night lineup in 1967, employing a talk show format, in an
attempt to rival the Tonight Show, which lasted until 1969. CBS went
without late-night TV until 1969, when it acquired The Merv Griffin Show
from syndication; Griffin returned to syndication in 1972, and CBS would
not air any further late-night talk shows until 1989, instead opting for
reruns, lifestyle programs and imported Canadian dramas in the time
slot. By the 1960s, NBC had already cornered the market for late-night
television viewing and would go on to dominate the ratings for several
decades.

Sometimes … you just gotta say "What the Fark." From the offbeat to the
well beaten path, it's the world seen through Fark-colored
glasses.WTFark host Mike Rylander and team take us through the best
stories of the day, with the clever, snarky edge that has made fark.com
one of the most successful news sites on the planet. It's not just news…
its WTFark!

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Ended

Runtime: 30 minutes

Premier: 2014-01-15

WTFark! - Ora TV - Netflix

Ora TV is a television production studio and on-demand digital
television network launched in 2012 by television host Larry King and
funded by América Móvil, a business venture of Mexican billionaire
Carlos Slim. Ora (which means “now” in Italian) both produces and
distributes television shows including Emmy-nominated Larry King Now,
Politicking with Larry King, Off the Grid with Jesse Ventura, Real
Girl's Kitchen with Haylie Duff, and Brown Bag Wine Tasting with William
Shatner. Ora has production offices and studios in New York City and Los
Angeles.

WTFark! - History - Netflix

Ora TV was founded by Larry King and Carlos Slim in 2012 as an outlet to
produce a new show for Larry King after leaving CNN. Larry King Now was
launched as Ora's first show in July 2012 and aired both on Ora TV and
Hulu. In 2014, Larry King Now episode “Head Trauma in the NFL” was
nominated for a News and Documentary Emmy Award in the Outstanding News
Discussion and Analysis category. In April 2013, Ora TV acquired Stick
Figure Studios, an Emmy award-winning documentary and reality series
production company based in New York. Stick Figure is the producer of
Catching Hell, a spearfishing docu-drama that aired on The Weather
Channel in the summer of 2014, with exclusive digital content on Ora TV.
Ora TV's other content includes Haylie Duff's Real Girl's Kitchen food &
lifestyle series that aired on both Ora TV and the Cooking Channel, the
Laugh Factory video archive, and road trip adventure show Wayward
Nation, which launched in September 2014. On June 30, 2015, Ora TV
severed ties with American real estate tycoon Donald Trump. Arturo Elías
Ayub, Slim’s son-in-law and chairman of Ora TV, called his remarks about
undocumented immigrants racist and an insult. An Episode of Politicking
which aired on September 8, 2016 and featured 2016 presidential
candidate Donald Trump was the spark of a controversy. Numerous media
outlets reported the interview was done by Russian state owned,
'Kremlin-backed' television. Ora TV released a statement clarifying that
the content is licensed to RT America but produced independently from
the network.

As part of her role as FOX Business Network's global markets editor,
business journalist Maria Bartiromo hosts this weekly Sunday morning
show on FBN sister network FOX News Channel Sunday Morning Futures
with Maria Bartiromo that focuses more on the general economy than the
stock market specifically. The hourlong show provides viewers with
information about how recent news events affect the economy. In
addition, Bartiromo interviews business leaders and newsmakers on topics
that include job creation and investment opportunities.

Maria Sara Bartiromo (born September 11, 1967) is an American television
journalist, magazine columnist, and author. She is host of Mornings with
Maria and Maria Bartiromo's Wall Street (the direct successor to the
original “Wall Street Week” on PBS, renamed in early 2018). Bartiromo is
global markets editor at Fox Business Network as well as the host of
Sunday Morning Futures with Maria Bartiromo on Fox News. She hosts Fox
Business Global Power Players segments. She worked at CNN for five years
before joining CNBC television. In 2013, she joined Fox Business Network
and Fox News. At CNBC, she was the anchor of the Closing Bell program
and the host and managing editor of On the Money with Maria Bartiromo
and is credited for becoming the first reporter to broadcast live from
the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.

Joey Ramone, of The Ramones, developed a crush on Bartiromo after his
band broke up in the late 1990s. He subsequently wrote a song titled
“Maria Bartiromo” that appeared on the Don't Worry About Me album
released posthumously in 2002.

48 Hours is a CBS news magazine that investigates intriguing crime
and justice cases that touch on all aspects of the human experience.
Over its long run, the show has helped exonerate wrongly convicted
people, driven the reopening -- and resolution -- of cold cases, and
changed numerous lives. CBS News correspondents offer an in-depth look
into each story, with the emphasis on solving the mystery at its heart.
The program and its team have earned critical acclaim, including 20
Emmys and three Peabody Awards.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 60 minutes

Premier: 1988-01-19

48 Hours - 48 Hours (TV series) - Netflix

48 Hours is an American documentary/news magazine television series
broadcast on CBS. The series has been broadcast on the network since
January 19, 1988. The program airs Saturdays at 10:00 p.m. Eastern and
Pacific Time, as part of the network's placeholder Crimetime Saturday
block; as such, it is currently one of only two remaining first-run
prime time programs (excluding sports) airing Saturday nights on the
major U.S. broadcast television networks (along with Univision's
Sabadazo). The program sometimes airs two-hour editions or two
consecutive one-hour editions, depending on the subject involved or to
serve as counterprogramming against other networks. The current senior
executive producer is Susan Zirinsky. Zirinsky has served as executive
producer since 1996. Reruns of 48 Hours are regularly broadcast on
Investigation Discovery, the Oprah Winfrey Network and TLC as part of
their daytime and/or weekend schedules, with varying titles based on the
edition's subject matter (such as 48 Hours Hard Evidence, 48 Hours
Investigates (a title that has also been used for the CBS broadcasts),
48 Hours on OWN or 48 Hours on ID).

48 Hours - 48 Hours: NCIS - Netflix

48 Hours: NCIS utilizes a similar format to the standard, although it
instead features real life cases from the Naval Criminal Investigative
Service. Rocky Carroll, who plays NCIS director Leon Vance on NCIS,
narrates these episodes, which aired on April 25, May 12, and May
23-June 13, 2017, all of which except for May 12 being on Tuesdays. As
of 2018, it is in its second season.

Tuesday in Parliament - What Happened to Monday - Netflix

What Happened to Monday (known as Seven Sisters in Canada, France,
Spain, Italy and Slovakia) is a 2017 dystopian science fiction thriller
film, written by Max Botkin and Kerry Williamson, directed by Tommy
Wirkola and starring Noomi Rapace, Glenn Close and Willem Dafoe. The
film was released theatrically in Europe and Asia and Netflix bought the
streaming rights to the film for the United States as well as the U.K.
and Latin America. Netflix released the film on August 18, 2017.

Veteran journalist Howard Kurtz is no stranger to criticizing the media.
He did it for 20 years as a media columnist for The Washington Post and
as host of CNN's long-running ``Reliable Sources'' from 1998 through
the first half of 2013. So it's no surprise that shortly after departing
CNN in mid-2013 for rival Fox News Channel he would premiere a show for
his new employer that is modeled after his previous program. In addition
to Kurtz and his weekly panel discussing how the press covers a variety
of topics that include technology, social media, politics and sports,
the host also interviews some of the country's top journalists. And, as
you might expect in these social mediacentric times, MediaBuzz
features some viewers' questions and comments on the show.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 60 minutes

Premier: 2013-09-08

MediaBuzz - Fox News Watch - Netflix

Fox News Watch is an American current event debate program on the Fox
News Channel hosted by Jon Scott which was dedicated to discussing media
bias. The show ended August 31, 2013, replaced by the similar MediaBuzz.

MediaBuzz - Reception and criticism - Netflix

Left-wing media critics and bloggers argue that Fox News Watch
perpetuates the myth of liberal bias in the mainstream media while
ignoring conservative bias by Fox News. Fox News Watch has also been
accused of ignoring or dismissing controversies concerning Fox News'
parent company, News Corporation, such as when an outtake was leaked
online showing the program's panelists refusing to discuss News Corp's
phone hacking scandal.

Good Morning Britain (also known as GMB) is a breakfast programme
on British television network ITV, broadcast weekdays from 6:00am to
8:30am. Good Morning Britain was launched on 28 April 2014 in place of
Daybreak.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 150 minutes

Premier: 2014-04-28

Good Morning Britain - Ranvir Singh - Netflix

Ranvir Singh (born 11 August 1977) is an English television presenter
and journalist, best known for her presenting roles on the ITV Breakfast
programmes Daybreak and Good Morning Britain. Singh occasionally
presents the ITV News bulletins, acting as a stand-in presenter and has
presented Real Stories with Ranvir Singh (2015–2016) and Eat, Shop, Save
(2017–present), both primetime factual series for ITV.

Good Morning Britain - Awards and honours - Netflix

In July 2013, Singh received an Honorary Fellowship from the University
of Central Lancashire. In October 2015 she won Media Personality of the
Year at the Asian Media Awards. On 20 January 2017 she was inaugurated
as Chancellor of the University of Central Lancashire.

Tuesday in Parliament - New Zealand Parliament - Netflix

The New Zealand Parliament (Māori: Pāremata Aotearoa) is the legislature
of New Zealand, consisting of the Queen of New Zealand
(Queen-in-Parliament) and the New Zealand House of Representatives. The
Queen is usually represented by a governor-general. Before 1951, there
was an upper chamber, the New Zealand Legislative Council. The
Parliament was established in 1854 and is one of the oldest continuously
functioning legislatures in the world. The House of Representatives has
met in the Parliament Buildings located in Wellington, the capital city
of New Zealand, since 1865. It normally consists of 120 members of
Parliament (MPs), though sometimes more due to overhang seats. 71 MPs
are elected directly in electorate seats and the remainder are filled by
list MPs based on each party's share of the party vote. Māori were
represented in Parliament from 1867, and in 1893 women gained the vote.
New Zealand does not allow sentenced prisoners to vote. Although
elections can be called early, each three years the House is dissolved
and goes up for reelection. The Parliament is closely linked to the
executive. The New Zealand Government comprises a prime minister (head
of government) and other ministers. In accordance with the principle of
responsible government, these individuals are always drawn from the
House of Representatives, and are held accountable to it. Neither the
monarch (currently Queen Elizabeth II) nor her governor-general
participates in the legislative process, save for signifying the Queen's
approval to a bill passed by the House, known as the granting of royal
assent, which is necessary for a bill to be enacted as law.

Tuesday in Parliament - History - Netflix

The New Zealand Parliament was created by the New Zealand Constitution
Act 1852 of the United Kingdom (UK), which established a bicameral
legislature officially called the “General Assembly”, but usually
referred to as Parliament. It was based on the Westminster model (that
is, the model of the British Parliament) and had a lower house, called
the House of Representatives, and an upper house, called the Legislative
Council. The members of the House of Representatives were elected under
the first-past-the-post (FPP) voting system, while those of the Council
were appointed by the Governor. Originally Councillors were appointed
for life, but later their terms were fixed at seven years. This change,
coupled with responsible government (whereby the Premier advised the
Governor on Council appointments) and party politics, meant that by the
20th century, the government usually controlled the Council as well as
the House, and the passage of bills through the Council became a
formality. In 1951, the Council was abolished altogether, making the New
Zealand legislature unicameral. Under the Constitution Act, legislative
power was also conferred on New Zealand's provinces (originally six in
number), each of which had its own elected Legislative Council. These
provincial legislatures were able to legislate for their provinces on
most subjects. However, New Zealand was never a federal dominion like
Canada or Australia; Parliament could legislate concurrently with the
provinces on any matter, and in the event of a conflict, the law passed
by Parliament would prevail. Over a twenty-year period, political power
was progressively centralised, and the provinces were abolished
altogether in 1876. Four Māori electorates were created in 1867 during
the term of the 4th Parliament. The Māori electorates have lasted far
longer than the intended five years. In 2002, the seats increased in
number to seven.

Originally the New Zealand Parliament remained subordinate to the
British Parliament, the supreme legislative authority for the entire
British Empire. The New Zealand Parliament received progressively more
control over New Zealand affairs through the passage of Imperial
(British) laws such as the Colonial Laws Validity Act 1865,
constitutional amendments, and an increasingly hands-off approach by the
British government. Finally, in 1947, the Statute of Westminster
Adoption Act gave Parliament full power over New Zealand law, and the
New Zealand Constitution Amendment Act 1947 of the UK allowed Parliament
to regulate its own composition. In 1986 a new Constitution Act was
passed, restating the few remaining provisions of the 1852 Act,
consolidating the legislation establishing Parliament and officially
replacing the name “General Assembly” with “Parliament”. One historical
speciality of the New Zealand Parliament was the country quota, which
gave greater representation to rural politics. From 1889 on (and even
earlier in more informal forms), districts were weighted according to
their urban/rural split (with any locality of less than 2,000 people
considered rural). Those districts which had large rural proportions
received a greater number of nominal votes than they actually contained
voters – as an example, in 1927, Waipawa, a district without any urban
population at all, received an additional 4,153 nominal votes to its
actual 14,838 – having the maximum factor of 28% extra representation.
The country quota was in effect until it was abolished in 1945 by a
mostly urban-elected Labour government, which switched to a
one-vote-per-person system.

News, Sport, Weather - Nine News Melbourne - Netflix

Nine News Melbourne is the weeknight, flagship news bulletin of the Nine
Network. It is screened in Melbourne, and across Victoria (weekends
only). Like all Nine News bulletins, the Melbourne bulletin runs for one
hour, from 6PM every day. It comprises local, national and international
news, as well as sport, weather and finance.

Sky News with Colin Brazier and Jayne Secker - References - Netflix

James McHale presents a complete half hour snapshot of the day's key
stories, with a focus on major national and world news. Includes
political coverage from Canberra, sport, finance and weather with Graham
Creed.

The Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) founded in 1929 is
Australia's national broadcaster, funded by the Australian Federal
Government but specifically independent of Government and politics in
the Commonwealth. The ABC plays a leading role in journalistic
independence and is fundamental in the history of broadcasting in
Australia. It is modelled on the BBC in the United Kingdom. While
originally financed by a similar method to the British model using
consumer licence fees on broadcasting receivers, its funding has evolved
to the current model approved by the Australian Parliament which, except
for some programs on its digital iView service, does not involve direct
fees on consumers, but is primarily a mix of direct grants from the
government and commercial activities related to its core broadcasting
mission. In recent times, the ABC provides television, radio, online and
mobile services throughout metropolitan and regional Australia and
overseas through Australia Plus and Radio Australia.

ABC News: Early Edition - Independence and impartiality - Netflix

... the ABC gather and present news and information with impartiality
and presents a diversity of perspectives so that, over time, no
significant strand of thought or belief within the community is
knowingly excluded or disproportionately represented. The broadcaster is
expected to take no editorial stance other than a commitment to
fundamental democratic principles.

Under the Australian Broadcasting Corporation Act 1983, the ABC Board is
bound to “maintain the independence and integrity of the Corporation”
and to ensure that “the gathering and presentation by the Corporation of
news and information is accurate and impartial according to the
recognized standards of objective journalism.” In relation to
impartiality and diversity of perspectives, the current ABC editorial
policy requires of the broadcaster that:

Follow the most dynamic and captivating election in recent history with
one of the best political analysts in the business! Brit Hume brings you
a jam-packed hour of powerful analysis and all of the up-to-the-minute
developments from the 2016 campaign trail in On the Record with Brit
Hume.

.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 60 minutes

Premier: 2016-09-07

On the Record with Brit Hume - Brit Hume - Netflix

Alexander Britton “Brit” Hume (born June 22, 1943) is an American
television journalist and political commentator. Hume had a 23-year
career with ABC News, where he contributed to World News Tonight with
Peter Jennings, Nightline and This Week. He served as ABC's chief White
House correspondent from 1989 through 1996. He then spent 12 years as
the Washington, D.C., managing editor of the Fox News Channel and the
anchor of Special Report with Brit Hume. After retiring as the anchor of
Special Report in 2008, he became a senior political analyst for Fox
News and a regular panelist on Fox News Sunday. In September 2016, he
was named the interim anchor of On the Record, after the abrupt
resignation of the show's longtime host, Greta Van Susteren, and served
in that capacity through the 2016 elections.

On the Record with Brit Hume - On the Record - Netflix

On September 6, 2016, Hume was named the anchor of On the Record after
that show's longtime anchor, Greta Van Susteren, abruptly left Fox News.
He served as the program's anchor through the end of the 2016 elections.
Hume's first show as host of On the Record drew 2.4 million viewers, a
double-digit increase over Van Susteren's average viewing audience in
2016. On November 4, 2016, it was announced that Tucker Carlson would
host a new show in the former On the Record timeslot from November 14,
2016.

The one minute daily reflective Angelus broadcast on RTÉ One is one of
Ireland's longest-running programmes, having been aired daily at 6.00pm
since the inception of RTÉ television in 1962.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 1 minutes

Premier: 1961-12-31

The Angelus - Angelus Temple - Netflix

Angelus Temple is a Pentecostal megachurch of the International Church
of the Foursquare Gospel in the Echo Park district of Los Angeles,
California, United States. The senior pastor is Matthew Barnett. The
attendance is 8,975 persons.

The Angelus - Buildings - Netflix

It was constructed under the leadership of denominational founder Aimee
Semple McPherson and dedicated on January 1, 1923. The cornerstone of
the building bears the inscription “Dedicated unto the cause of
inter-denominational and worldwide evangelism”. The temple, located
opposite Echo Park Lake, had an original seating capacity of 5,300, huge
for a church then and now, but suited well for the crowds McPherson
attracted as an evangelical sensation of the 1920s and 1930s. The
halcyon days have yet to be repeated, and a 2002 renovation has left it
with a capacity of a more manageable 3,500. According to the United
States Department of Labor’s Consumer Price Index, Angelus Temple’s
construction would cost $3,245,964.91 in 2014. It was the largest
construction of its time in North America, rising “125 feet from the
main floor”. A panorama of clouds, which was the work of artist Anne
Henneke, adorns the ceiling, and the temple has eight stained glass
windows depicting the life of Jesus Christ, created by artist George
Haskins. The building underwent renovations in 1972, while still
retaining its original interior and exterior appearance. The lighted
cross atop the temple's dome is a longstanding landmark. The entire
temple was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1992. It was a
Class “A” fireproof building constructed of concrete and steel designed
by Brook Hawkins. The main architectural feature of the structure is its
large, unsupported concrete dome coated with a mixture of ground abalone
shells. The dome's interior was painted azure blue, with fleecy clouds,
a reminder to “work while it's day” and “to look for His coming”.
McPherson insisted on a bright joyous setting, avoiding any reminder of
sin from either artwork or motto. In back of the pulpit was her theme
verse from Hebrews 13:8 “Jesus Christ the same yesterday, and today and
forever.” She later said that she loved “every stone in Angelus
Temple,...I love to touch its walls, its altar,...I look to its high
vaulted dome....” but no part of the church pleased her more than the
magnificent Kimball pipe organ which always soothed her and brought her
peace of mind. The main building was dedicated on January 1, 1923. The
auditorium had a seating capacity of 5,300 people and was filled three
times each day, seven days a week. L. I. F. E. Bible College was founded
in a building adjacent to Angelus Temple. This building is currently the
home of the Angelus Temple Hispanic Church. The former Queen of Angels
Hospital is the base of operations for the Dream Center, which housed
many people from the Gulf States displaced after Hurricane Katrina and
Hurricane Rita. In 2001, Pastor Matthew Barnett and the International
Church of the Foursquare Gospel united the Dream Center with Angelus
Temple.

Seven News Investigates - Brian Ross (journalist) - Netflix

Brian Elliot Ross (born October 23, 1948) is an American investigative
journalist who serves as Chief Investigative Correspondent for ABC News.
He reports for ABC World News Tonight with David Muir, Nightline, Good
Morning America, 20/20, and ABC News Radio. Ross joined ABC News in July
1994. His investigative reports have often covered government
corruption. He has been with ABC News since July 1994. From 1974 until
1994, Ross was a correspondent for NBC News.

Seven News Investigates - Early life - Netflix

Ross was born and raised in Chicago, Illinois. He graduated from the
University of Iowa journalism school in 1971.

World News Today - Today (U.S. TV program) - Netflix

Today, also called The Today Show, is an American news and talk morning
television show that airs on NBC. The program debuted on January 14,
1952. It was the first of its genre on American television and in the
world, and after 66 years of broadcasting it is the
fifth-longest-running American television series. Originally a weekday
two-hour program from 7-9 a.m., it expanded to Sundays in 1987 and
Saturdays in 1992. The weekday broadcast expanded to three hours in
2000, and to four hours in 2007 (though over time, the third and fourth
hours essentially became their own distinct entities). Today's dominance
was virtually unchallenged by the other networks until the late 1980s,
when it was overtaken by ABC's Good Morning America. Today retook the
Nielsen ratings lead the week of December 11, 1995, and held onto that
position for 852 consecutive weeks until the week of April 9, 2012, when
Good Morning America topped it again. Today maintained its No. 2 status
behind GMA from the summer of 2012 until it regained the lead in the
aftermath of anchor Matt Lauer's departure in November 2017. In 2002,
Today was ranked No. 17 on TV Guide's 50 Greatest TV Shows of All Time.
The entertainment magazine Variety reported the 2016 advertising revenue
during the first two hours of the show was $508.8 million.

For almost as long as there has been television, there's been Meet the
Press. The hourlong Sunday morning public affairs program has featured
interviews with countless U.S. and world leaders, and has reviewed,
analyzed and discussed the news of the week -- all while looking toward
the week ahead.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 60 minutes

Premier: 1947-11-06

Meet the Press - Meet the Parents - Netflix

Meet the Parents is a 2000 American comedy written by Jim Herzfeld and
John Hamburg and directed by Jay Roach. Starring Robert De Niro and Ben
Stiller, the film chronicles a series of unfortunate events that befall
a good-hearted but hapless nurse while visiting his girlfriend's
parents. Teri Polo, Blythe Danner, and Owen Wilson also star. Meet the
Parents is a remake of a 1992 film of the same name directed by Greg
Glienna and produced by Jim Vincent. Glienna—who also played the
original film's main protagonist—and Mary Ruth Clarke co-wrote the
screenplay. Universal Studios purchased the rights to Glienna's film
with the intent of creating a new version. Jim Herzfeld expanded the
original script but development was halted for some time. Jay Roach read
the expanded script and expressed his desire to direct the film but
Universal declined him. At that time, Steven Spielberg was interested in
directing the film while Jim Carrey was interested in playing the lead
role. The studio only offered the film to Roach once Spielberg and
Carrey left the project. Released in the United States and Canada on
October 6, 2000 and distributed by Universal Studios, the film earned
back its initial budget of $55 million in only eleven days. It went on
to become one of the highest-grossing films of 2000, earning over $160
million in North America and over $330 million worldwide. Meet the
Parents was well received by film critics and viewers alike, winning
several awards and earning additional nominations. Ben Stiller won two
comedy awards for his performance and the film was chosen as the
Favorite Comedy Motion Picture at the 2001 People's Choice Awards. The
success of Meet the Parents inspired two film sequels, namely Meet the
Fockers and Little Fockers released in 2004 and 2010 respectively. Meet
the Parents also inspired a reality television show titled Meet My Folks
and a situation comedy titled In-Laws, both of them debuting on NBC in
2002.

Meet the Press - Themes - Netflix

Greg Focker is a middle-class Jewish nurse whose social and cultural
position is juxtaposed against the Byrnes family of upper-class White
Anglo-Saxon Protestants. With respect to Greg as a Jew and a nurse when
compared to the Byrnes and Banks families, a distinct cultural gap is
created and subsequently widened. The cultural differences are often
highlighted and Greg is repeatedly made aware of them. This serves to
achieve comedic effect through character development and has also been
commented upon as being indicative of thematic portrayal of Jewish
characters' roles in modern film as well as being a prime example of how
male nurses are portrayed in media. Speaking about character development
in Meet the Parents, director Jay Roach stated that he wanted an
opportunity to “do character-driven comedy” and “to create realistic
characters, but heighten the comedic situations and predicaments.”
Vincent Brook observes mainstream Hollywood cinema's tendency since the
1990s of incorporating Jewish liminality and “popularizing the Jew.” He
explains the “manly Jewish triumph” of characters like Jeff Goldblum's
David Levinson in Independence Day and labels it as a “certain answer to
America's yearnings for a new Jewish hero.” This stands in direct
contrast to the schlemiel or “the Jewish fool” which was seen to have
been revitalized in the mid-1990s after faltering since the 1960s. The
schlemiel, Brook explains, is an anti-hero in whose humiliation the
audience finds supreme pleasure. Within that context, Brook describes
Greg Focker's character as “the quintessential example of the postmodern
schlemiel.” The repeated embarrassing encounters that Greg faces with
his girlfriend's all-American family is compared to the example of Jason
Biggs's character Jim Levenstein of the American Pie film series where
Levenstein is often the comedic centerpiece due to his repeated sexual
embarrassments.

Anne Bower writes about Jewish characters at mealtime as part of the
broader movement she believes started in the 1960s where filmmakers
started producing work that explored the “Jewish self-definition.” She
postulates that the dinner table becomes an arena where Jewish
characters are often and most pointedly put into “conflicts with their
ethnic and sexual selves.” She describes the example of Greg sitting
down for dinner with the Byrnes family and being asked to bless the
food. In this scene, Greg attempts to recite a prayer by improvising
and, in doing so, launches into a recital of the song “Day by Day” from
Act I of Godspell. Bower notes this scene as “particularly important for
establishing the cultural distance” between the Jewish Greg and the
Christian Byrnes. She noted that the social gap is further widened next
morning when Greg is the last person to arrive at the breakfast table;
he shows up wearing pajamas while everyone else is fully clothed. Here
Greg is shown eating a bagel, which Bower argues as being a clear
signifier of Jewishness. Based on common misconceptions and stereotypes
about men in nursing, Greg's profession is repeatedly brought up by Jack
Byrnes in a negative context and the character of Greg Focker has come
to be one of the best known film portrayals of a male nurse. Even though
men dominated the profession in earlier times, there has been a
feminization of the nursing profession over the course of the last
century which has caused men in nursing to often be portrayed as misfits
by the media. A common stereotype is that of a man who accepts a career
in nursing as an unfortunate secondary career choice, either failing to
become a physician or still trying to become one. Such stereotyping is
due to a presumption that a man would prefer to be a physician but is
unable to become one due to lack of intelligence or non-masculine
attributes. Jack Byrnes is often seen openly criticizing Greg's career
choice per his perception of nursing being an effeminate profession. In
their book Men in Nursing: History, Challenges, and Opportunities
authors Chad O'Lynn and Russell Tranbarger present this as an example of
a negative portrayal. Commenting on the same issue but disagreeing,
Barbara Cherry in her book Contemporary Nursing: Issues, Trends, &
Management called the portrayal of Greg as a nurse “one of the most
positive film portrayals of men who are nurses” and commented that Greg
“humorously addresses and rises above the worst of all stereotypes that
are endured by men in this profession.” Sandy and Harry Summers in the
book Saving Lives: Why the Media's Portrayal of Nurses Puts Us All at
Risk postulate that Greg's character, although intelligent and firm in
his defense of his profession, “might have done more to rebut the
stereotypes” while also reporting that “some men in nursing” expressed
their opinions that it would have been better to not present the
stereotypes at all.

STV News Special - STV Sports Centre - Netflix

STV Sports Centre was a Scottish regional sports stand, covering the two
STV franchise areas of Northern and Central Scotland. The strand was
produced the STV News department in Glasgow (STV Central), with
contributions from STV North's news team in Aberdeen. Until May 2011,
Sports Centre aired two different programmes: Friday Night Football,
broadcast on Friday nights at 10:30pm, and Magners League Rugby - airing
on Sundays straight after the late ITV News bulletin. Short Sports
Centre news bulletins also aired on Monday - Thursday nights at 10:35pm
during the late regional bulletins from STV News. The first series of
STV Sports Centre, launched just two years after the long-running
Scotsport was axed, featured interviews, special reports, analysis, a
preview of the weekend's football and competitions. Gerry McCulloch and
Sheelagh McLaren were the main co-hosts, Stefani Dailly and Chris Harvey
acted as relief presenters in their absence.

STV News Special - Sports Centre Rugby - Netflix

Sports Centre Rugby was broadcast on Sunday nights after the late ITV
News bulletin. It featured highlights from the weekend's Celtic League
games with extended coverage of matches involving Glasgow Warriors and
Edinburgh Rugby. Originally broadcast as STV Rugby, the programme was
introduced in September 2009 after a deal was reached between the Celtic
League Association, Scottish Rugby and STV, following the closure of
Setanta Sports' UK operations. The Sports Centre strand was discontinued
in 2011, with highlights of the new 2011/12 rugby season, now known as
Pro12 airing under the STV Rugby banner once again.

Recorded coverage of questions today in the House of Commons to the
Prime Minister.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 30 minutes

Premier: 2016-03-23

Prime Minister's Questions - Prime Minister of India - Netflix

The Prime Minister of India is the leader of the executive of the
Government of India. The prime minister is also the chief adviser to the
President of India and head of the Council of Ministers. They can be a
member of any of the two houses of the Parliament of India — the Lok
Sabha (House of the People) and the Rajya Sabha (Council of the States)
— but has to be a member of the political party or coalition, having a
majority in the Lok Sabha. The prime minister is the senior-most member
of cabinet in the executive of government in a parliamentary system. The
prime minister selects and can dismiss members of the cabinet; allocates
posts to members within the government; and is the presiding member and
chairperson of the cabinet. The union cabinet headed by the prime
minister is appointed by the President of India to assist the latter in
the administration of the affairs of the executive. Union cabinet is
collectively responsible to the Lok Sabha as per Article 75(3) of the
Constitution of India. The prime minister has to enjoy the confidence of
a majority in the Lok Sabha and shall resign if they are unable to prove
majority when instructed by the president.

Prime Minister's Questions - Deputy prime minister - Netflix

The post of Deputy Prime Minister of India is not technically a
constitutional post, nor is there any mention of it in an Act of the
parliament. But historically, on various occasions, different
governments have assigned one of their senior ministers as the 'deputy
prime minister'. There is neither constitutional requirement for filling
the post of deputy PM, nor does the post provide any kind of special
powers. Typically, senior cabinet ministers like the finance minister or
the home minister are appointed as deputy prime minister. The post is
considered to be the senior most in the cabinet after the prime minister
and represents the government in his/her absence. Generally, deputy
prime ministers have been appointed to strengthen the coalition
governments. The first holder of this post was Vallabhbhai Patel, who
was also the home minister in Jawaharlal Nehru's cabinet.

Teen Kids News (initially titled EKN Worldwide Kids News and
alternately abbreviated on-air as TKN since 2012) is an educational
newsmagazine series aimed at children between the ages of 13–16 years
old and their parents that debuted in first-run syndication the weekend
of September 27, 2003. Teen Kids News discusses important issues in a
format intended to educate and inform both children and adults.
In-studio segments are shot at studios in Manhattan with field reports
done on location around the country and world. The series meets Federal
Communications Commission guidelines for educational and informational
programming. U.S. television stations are required by law to broadcast
three hours of children's programming each week; the majority of
affiliates that run the series typically air it on Saturday or Sunday
mornings depending on the station, though a few air the series on
Fridays in the morning or daytime time periods.

The series airs on over 200 TV stations covering approximately 91% of
the country and is seen in 1,000 locations in 175 countries worldwide
through the American Forces Network and is seen in 12,600 schools
through a special classroom education feed. Although the TV Parental
Guidelines do not require news programs to receive a rating, all
episodes of the series are rated TV-PG. Beginning with the tenth season
premiere on the weekend of September 15, 2012, Teen Kids News began
broadcasting in high-definition. In-studio segments are broadcast in the
format, though most field reports continue to be produced and aired in
4:3 standard definition, with pillarboxing added to fill the left and
right sides ofwidescreen television sets.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 30 minutes

Premier: 2003-09-27

Teen Kids News - Cole Sprouse - Netflix

Cole Mitchell Sprouse (born August 4, 1992) is an American actor, and
twin brother of Dylan Sprouse. He is known for his role as Cody Martin
on the Disney Channel series The Suite Life of Zack & Cody and its
spinoff The Suite Life on Deck. As of 2017, Sprouse stars as Jughead
Jones on The CW television series Riverdale.

The most-watched news program in Canada for more than two decades is
headed by Lisa LaFlamme, who delivers the news each weeknight supported
by a team of correspondents and bureau reporters across North America.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 30 minutes

Premier: 1961-10-01

CTV National News - Lloyd Robertson - Netflix

Lloyd Robertson, OC (born January 19, 1934) is a Canadian journalist and
former news anchor who is special correspondent on CTV's weekly magazine
series, W5. Robertson served as the chief anchor and senior editor of
CTV's national evening newscast, CTV News with Lloyd Robertson, until
September 2011, when he retired from the CTV National News team. He
co-hosted W5 from 2011 to 2016. Robertson has covered many major events
throughout his career, including the 1967 opening of Expo 67 in
Montreal, the 1969 Moon landing (along with Percy Saltzman), many
Olympic Games, Terry Fox's Marathon of Hope, the patriation of the
Constitution of Canada, both the 1980 Quebec referendum and the 1995
Quebec referendum on separation from Canada, many federal elections, the
death of Diana, Princess of Wales, the September 11 attacks in 2001, and
the power outage crisis on both sides of the border. On the scene, he
has covered the construction of the Berlin Wall, the deaths of four
former Canadian prime ministers, the elections of nearly half of
Canada's prime ministers, state funerals, and royal, papal, and U.S.
presidential visits. His name was also the basis for the satirical news
anchor character Floyd Robertson, portrayed by Joe Flaherty on the
Canadian TV comedy series SCTV.

CTV National News - Personal life - Netflix

Robertson married his high school sweetheart, Nancy Barrett, in July
1956. They have four daughters (Lisa, Nanci, Susan, and Lynda) and seven
grandchildren. On March 29, 2018, Robertson was uninjured in a
multi-vehicle traffic accident on the Don Valley Parkway.

Squawk on the Street is headquartered live on the floor of the New
York Stock Exchange. We are there when the all-important opening bell
rings every day. With our exclusive "Eye on the Floor" wireless cameras
at the NYSE we take the viewer onto the floor of the exchange, right to
the posts where the biggest companies in the world trade. In addition,
our exclusive "Tick by Tick" charts track the action of every trade of
every stock. Our live market coverage doesn't stop on the corner of Wall
and Broad Streets in lower Manhattan. We also have exclusive coverage
from the floor of the CME Group in Chicago giving our viewers the
treasury, currency and commodity action in real time. In addition,
"Squawk on the Street" is also on the air when the closing bells ring
throughout Europe. That final hour of European trading starting at
10:30am eastern has proven to be very volatile and has a major impact on
all U.S. based markets.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 120 minutes

Premier: 2005-12-19

Squawk on the Street - Squawk on the Street - Netflix

Squawk on the Street, which debuted on December 19, 2005, is a business
show on CNBC that follows the first 90 minutes of trading on Wall Street
in the United States. Originally airing as a one-hour program, the show
doubled its airtime to two hours on July 19, 2007 (due in part to Liz
Claman's departure from the network). This replaced the first hour of
Morning Call (later renamed The Call on August 8, 2007), which aired one
hour later and had its airtime reduced in half. On October 17, 2011,
Squawk on the Street was expanded to 3 hours, from 9am to noon ET. The
Call was canceled as a result of this program's expansion. On May 19,
2014, Squawk on the Street reverted to 2 hours (9am to 11am ET) as a new
program, Squawk Alley, debuted on that day.

PBS NewsHour is the long running news magazine broadcast every
weeknight on PBS. The show was created by veteran newsmen Robert MacNeil
& Jim Lehrer, and has been on the air since 1975. In 2009, the show,
previously known as The NewsHour With Jim Lehrer, became PBS NewsHour.
One of the major differences between network news and the PBS NewsHour
is that because the show is publicly funded, there are no commercials.
This allows the NewsHour to dedicate more time to comprehensive
reporting. The nightly broadcast features a two-anchor format, with a
rotation of NEWSHOUR senior correspondents Gwen Ifill, Judy Woodruff and
Jeffrey Brown. Senior correspondents Margaret Warner and Ray Suarez
deliver compelling original reporting & newsmaker interviews from the
field. Correspondent Hari Sreenivasan delivers news to the digital world
and anchors the news summary on the television broadcasts.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 60 minutes

Premier: 1975-10-20

PBS NewsHour - Gwen Ifill - Netflix

Gwendolyn L. “Gwen” Ifill ( EYE-fəl; September 29, 1955 – November 14,
2016) was an American Peabody Award-winning journalist, television
newscaster, and author. In 1999, she became the first woman of African
Descent to host a nationally televised U.S. public affairs program with
Washington Week in Review. She was the moderator and managing editor of
Washington Week and co-anchor and co-managing editor, with Judy
Woodruff, of PBS NewsHour, both of which air on PBS. Ifill was a
political analyst and moderated the 2004 and 2008 American
vice-presidential debates. She authored the best-selling book The
Breakthrough: Politics and Race in the Age of Obama.

PBS NewsHour - Early life and education - Netflix

Ifill was born in the Queens neighborhood of Jamaica in New York City,
the fifth of six children of African Methodist Episcopal (AME) minister
(Oliver) Urcille Ifill, Sr., a Panamanian of Barbadian descent who
emigrated from Panama, and Eleanor Ifill, who was from Barbados. Her
father's ministry required the family to live in several cities in New
England and on the Eastern Seaboard during her youth, where he pastored
AME churches. As a child, she lived in Pennsylvania and Massachusetts
church parsonages and in federally-subsidized housing in Buffalo and New
York City. She graduated in 1977 with a Bachelor of Arts in
communications from Simmons College, a women's college in Boston,
Massachusetts.

Sky News at Seven - List of The Seven Deadly Sins episodes - Netflix

The Seven Deadly Sins is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated
by Nakaba Suzuki. The series follows Elizabeth, the third princess of
the Kingdom of Liones, who is in search of the Seven Deadly Sins, a
group of former Holy Knights who were disbanded after the kingdom was
overthrown. She enlists the help of Meliodas and Hawk, the captain of
the Seven Deadly Sins and his talking pet pig, to assemble the remaining
members of the Seven Deadly Sins and take back the kingdom from the Holy
Knights. The series debuted on MBS and other Japan News Network stations
on October 5, 2014. A second season of the anime series was confirmed on
September 27, 2015, and aired on January 13, 2018. An original video
animation (OVA) titled “Ban's Additional Chapter” (バンの番外編, Ban no
Bangai-hen) was included with the limited edition of volume 15 of the
manga, released on June 17, 2015. A second OVA composed of nine humorous
shorts was shipped with the limited edition of the sixteenth volume of
the manga, released on August 12, 2015. The first The Seven Deadly Sins
anime series was licensed for English release by Netflix as its second
exclusive anime, following their acquisition of Knights of Sidonia. All
24 episodes were released on November 1, 2015 in both subtitled or
English dub formats. The Signs of Holy War arc of the series, labeled as
Season 2, was added to the service on February 17, 2017.

Sky News at Seven - Songs - Netflix

The show's first opening theme song is “Netsujō no Spectrum”
(熱情のスペクトラム, Netsujō no Supekutoramu, “Spectrum of Passion”)
performed by Ikimono-gakari for the first twelve episodes and the second
opening theme is “Seven Deadly Sins” performed by Man with a Mission,
while the first ending theme titled “7-Seven” is a collaboration between
Flow and Granrodeo, the second ending theme from episode thirteen
onwards is “Season” the major label debut of Alisa Takigawa. The Seven
Deadly Sins: Revival of The Commandments first opening theme song titled
“Howling” is a collaboration between Flow and Granrodeo, and first
ending theme song is “Beautiful” performed by Anly. The second opening
theme titled “Ame ga Furu kara, Niji ga Deru”(雨が降るから虹が出る) by
Sky Peace and second ending theme titled “Chikai”(誓い) by Sora Amamiya.

Sky News is launching a new dynamic Sunday morning programme hosted by
former political correspondent, Sophy Ridge. Sophy Ridge on Sunday will
be a one hour programme broadcast at 10am that will focus on the
political week in Westminster and what it means for the lives of the
wider public.

The show will pick up on the mood of the nation as Brexit negotiations
begin, and will examine how policy decisions will affect the lives of
the electorate.

There will be a major interview at the top of the hour, a special weekly
feature ‘Ridge on the Road' where Sophy explores how the country is
reacting to Westminster, paper reviews and analysis from the Sky News
specialist team on the week's major stories.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 120 minutes

Premier: 2017-01-08

Sophy Ridge on Sunday - Robert Peston - Netflix

Robert James Kenneth Peston (born 25 April 1960) is a British
journalist, presenter, and founder of the education charity Speakers for
Schools. He is the Political Editor of ITV News and host of the weekly
political discussion show Peston on Sunday. From February 2006 until
March 2014, he was the Business Editor for BBC News and Economics Editor
from March 2014 to November 2015. He became known to a wider public with
his reporting of the late-2000s financial crisis, especially with his
scoop on the Northern Rock crisis.

Sophy Ridge on Sunday - Awards - Netflix

Peston has won the Harold Wincott Senior Financial Journalist of the
Year Award (2005), the London Press Club's Scoop of the Year Award
(2005), Granada Television's What the Papers Say award for Investigative
Journalist of the Year (1994) and the Wincott Young Financial Journalist
of the Year (1986). At the Royal Television Society's Television
Journalism Awards 2008/09 Peston won both “Specialist Journalist of the
Year” and “Television Journalist of the Year” for his coverage of the
credit crunch and a string of 'scoops' associated with it. Also, his
scoop on Lloyds TSB's takeover of HBOS won the Royal Television
Society's “Scoop of the Year” award. He was voted Best Performer in a
Non-Acting Role in the Broadcasting Press Guild's 2009 awards and
Business Journalist of the Year in the London Press Club's 2009 awards.
In the 2008 Wincott Awards, he won the Broadcaster of the Year Award and
he won the online award for his blog. In 2009, he was named Political
Journalist of the Year in the Political Studies Association Awards, and
he topped polls of the general public and journalists carried out by
Press Gazette to find the highest rated finance and business journalist.
Peston's scoop on Northern Rock seeking emergency financial help from
the Bank of England won the Royal Television Society's Television
Journalism Award for Scoop of the Year in the 2007/8 awards and the
Wincott Award for Business News/Current Affairs Programme of the Year.
He was Journalist of the Year in the Business Journalism of the Year
Awards for 2007/08, and also won in the Scoop category. Peston won the
Work Foundation's Broadcast News Journalism Award and the Foundation's
Radio Programme of the Year Award (for his File on 4, “The Inside Story
of Northern Rock”). His blog won the digital media category in the
Private Equity and Venture Capital Journalist of the Year Awards. Peston
received an Honorary Doctorate from Heriot-Watt University in 2010. In
2011, he was honoured as a Fellow of Aberystwyth University in
recognition of “his success in journalism, his insightful writing and
his contribution to the local community”.

Check-point - Check mark - Netflix

A check mark, checkmark or tick is a mark (✓, ✔, etc.) used (primarily
in the English speaking world) to indicate the concept “yes” (e.g. “yes;
this has been verified”, “yes; that is the correct answer”, “yes; this
has been completed”, or “yes; this [item or option] applies to me”). The
x mark is also sometimes used for this purpose (most notably on election
ballot papers, e.g. in the United Kingdom), but otherwise usually
indicates “no”, incorrectness, or failure. As a verb, to check (off) or
tick (off), means to add such a mark. Printed forms, printed documents,
and computer software (see checkbox), commonly include squares in which
to place check marks.

Check-point - History - Netflix

The check mark is believed to have been created during the Roman Empire.
“V” was used to shorten the word “veritas”, meaning 'truth'. This was
used to indicate yes, true, or confirmed on items in a list. Over time,
the design of the mark started to change. As people started writing more
quickly, the right side became elongated.

Nuacht TG4 - RTÉ News and Current Affairs - Netflix

RTÉ News and Current Affairs (Irish: Nuacht agus Cúrsaí Reatha RTÉ), is
a major division of Raidió Teilifís Éireann and provides a range of
national and international news and current affairs programming for RTÉ
television, radio and online and also for the independent Irish language
broadcaster TG4. It is, by far, the largest and most popular news source
in Ireland – with 77% of the Irish public regarding it as their main
source of both Irish and international news. It broadcasts in English,
Irish and Irish Sign Language. The organisation is also a source of
commentary on current affairs. The division is based at the RTÉ
Television Centre in Donnybrook, Dublin, however, the station also
operates regional bureaux across Ireland and the world.

Nuacht TG4 - Programming - Netflix

RTÉ News and Current Affairs is responsible for all the news bulletins
on RTÉ One, RTÉ Two, TG4, RTÉ Radio 1, RTÉ 2fm, RTÉ lyric fm, RTE News
Now, RTÉ Raidió na Gaeltachta, and RTÉ Europe. The division also
provides written news updates on RTÉ's teletext service, Aertel, RTÉ
Mobile and RTÉ.ie. General news bulletins on TV and radio are usually
branded as RTÉ News. RTÉ News faces competition from within Ireland and
abroad. For local news TV3 News provides competition in the television
sector; as do Newstalk, Today FM and 4fm in the radio sector. As Ireland
is a predominantly English-speaking nation, international news channels
(CNBC Europe, CNN International, EuroNews, France 24, BBC News, Sky
News, etc.) compete with RTÉ with regards television news coverage of
international events. Despite this competition however, RTÉ News remains
the most popular source of news in Ireland.

Andrew Wilson presents the latest national and international news, sport
and weather.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Ended

Runtime: 90 minutes

Premier: 2016-04-15

Sky News at 5 with Andrew Wilson - Ricky Wilson (singer) - Netflix

Charles Richard “Ricky” Wilson (born 17 January 1978) is an English
singer-songwriter, and the frontman of five-piece band Kaiser Chiefs.
Before the formation of the band, in 2003, Wilson was a member of the
band Runston Parva (later known as Parva), which consisted of members of
Kaiser Chiefs. On 19 September 2013, Wilson was confirmed as a coach on
The Voice UK. He was the winning coach for both the fourth and fifth
series of the show, being the only coach to win two years consecutively.
Wilson left the show after three series, following the show's move to
ITV.

Sky News at 5 with Andrew Wilson - Personal life - Netflix

During the early days of Kaiser Chiefs, Wilson was well known for
wearing stripy blazers, waistcoats, turn-up jeans, and winkle picker
shoes, a style that won him the Shockwaves NME Award For Best Dressed
Person in 2006. Lately, he has adopted a more casual dress code. Wilson
is well known for his energetic stage presence, climbing scaffolding,
standing on the safety barrier, and at times crowd surfing. Of crowd
surfing, Wilson says he likes to “get out and see the crowd, see what
they smell like”. Such exploits have occasionally resulted in injury,
such as torn ankle ligaments after jumping off stage during a concert in
Portugal. In May 2006, Wilson was involved in a hit-and-run accident in
Leeds. He was hit by the car while attempting to walk over a pedestrian
crossing, suffering only bruising and a broken toe owing to a 'Ricky
trademark jump' which resulted in him hitting the windscreen and being
flipped over the top of the vehicle rather than trapped underneath.
Wilson and the band are supporters of Amnesty International and
Nordoff-Robbins music therapy. Ricky is Engaged to be Married in August
2019 to Celebrity stylist Grace Zito

"Game Change" authors Mark Halperin and John Heilemann host this daily,
hour long show, the centerpiece of Bloomberg's new Bloomberg Politics
unit. In addition to the latest news of the day, the pair welcomes
guests from the top tier of the political spectrum -- House Minority
Leader Nancy Pelosi and Gov. Mitt Romney were in the premiere episode --
but politics is just one of the subjects covered on With All Due
Respect for entertainment topics are also a regular feature.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 60 minutes

Premier: 2014-10-06

With All Due Respect - Kasie Hunt - Netflix

Kasie S. Hunt (born May 24, 1985) is an American political
correspondent. She is an NBC News Capitol Hill correspondent, covering
Congress across all NBC News and MSNBC platforms. Hunt is the host of
MSNBC Kasie DC, which airs on MSNBC on Sundays at 7 p.m.

Progressive outer retinal necrosis, also known as Varicella zoster virus
retinitis (VZVR), is an aggressive, necrotizing inflammation of the
eye's retina caused by herpes varicella zoster virus. It is typically
found in people with advanced AIDS, but has also been reported in those
who are severely immunocompromised due to chemotherapy. The majority of
those with progressive outer retinal necrosis develop severe vision loss
and blindness. Systemic antiviral drugs may improve the long-term visual
outcome in those with the disease.

Annozero (YearZero) was a television program in-depth political Rai
2 conducted in the early evening by Michele Santoro and broadcast from
14 September 2006 to 28 June 2011. It was the first program that RAI has
appointed Santoro after the suspension of the program in 2002 Shoeshine
following the statements of Silvio Berlusconi on 18 April of that year
(the so-called "Bulgarian edict"), which effectively marked for some
years the conductor away from Italian television. According to the same
Santoro, Annozero not usufruiva the fee Rai and was self-financed with
commercials.

Type: News

Languages: Italian

Status: Ended

Runtime: 140 minutes

Premier: 2006-09-14

AnnoZero - Beatrice Borromeo - Netflix

Donna Beatrice Borromeo (born 18 August 1985 in Innichen) is a member of
the ancient aristocratic House of Borromeo, and she is well known in the
Italian news media as a television personality. She is the wife of
Pierre Casiraghi, younger son of Caroline, Princess of Hanover.

AnnoZero - Education - Netflix

She finished secondary education, in 2002, at Milan's Liceo Classico
Giovanni Berchet. Borromeo received a bachelor of laws from Bocconi
University, Milan in 2010, under supervision of prof. Lorenzo Cuocolo.
She also received a Masters in Journalism from Columbia University
Journalism School in May 2012.

Al Rojo Vivo con Maria Celeste is a news magazine that in one hour,
takes viewers on a journey through the world. It is an "information
paella" that offers something for everyone: local and international
news, entertainment, fashion, live interviews, special investigations,
human interest, health, consumer alerts and new technology. Al Rojo Vivo
con Maria Celeste airs in the United States from Monday to Friday at 4
pm EST / PST, 3 pm center.

This is a list of television programs currently broadcast (in first-run
or reruns), scheduled to be broadcast or formerly broadcast on
Telemundo, a Spanish-language American broadcast television network,
owned by NBCUniversal, a division of Comcast.

Special and live breaking reports of stories from across the UK and the
rest of the world.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: None minutes

Premier: 2006-12-13

BBC News Special - BBC News (TV channel) - Netflix

BBC News (also known as the BBC News Channel) is the BBC's 24-hour
rolling news television network in the United Kingdom. The channel
launched as BBC News 24 on 9 November 1997 at 17:30 as part of the BBC's
foray into digital domestic television channels, becoming the first
competitor to Sky News, which had been running since 1989. For a time,
looped news, sport and weather bulletins were available to view via BBC
Red Button. On 22 February 2006, the channel was named News Channel of
the Year at the Royal Television Society Television Journalism Awards
for the first time in its history. The judges remarked that this was the
year that the channel had “really come into its own.” From May 2007,
viewers in the UK could watch the channel via the BBC News website. In
April 2008, the channel was renamed BBC News as part of a £550,000
rebranding of the BBC's news output, complete with a new studio and
presentation. Its sister service, BBC World was also renamed BBC World
News while the national news bulletins became BBC News at One, BBC News
at Six and BBC News at Ten. Across the day the channel averages about
twice the audience of Sky News. The channel is based at and broadcasts
from Broadcasting House in the West End of London. In 2017, it was named
the RTS News Channel of the Year

The latest news from around the world, featuring sport and weather
updates as well.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 30 minutes

Premier: 1972-10-16

ITV Lunchtime News - ITV News London - Netflix

ITV News London is a regional news programme for the ITV London region
(previously Carlton/LWT), produced by ITN.

ITV Lunchtime News - LNN - Netflix

The programme launched on Monday 4 January 1993 as London Tonight, after
Carlton Television won the London weekday franchise from previous holder
Thames Television. London Tonight was originally produced by London News
Network – a joint venture between Carlton and LWT designed to provide a
sole ITV regional news service for the London area, broadcasting seven
days a week. Its creation established a continuity between the once
separate services and presentation of weekend and weekday news, weather
and sport in the region, previously provided by Thames News and LWT
News. The flagship programme, initially an hour long and presented by
Alastair Stewart and Fiona Foster, was supplemented by shorter London
Today bulletins, launched on New Year's Day 1993 (LWT discontinued its
own local news service over the weekend). The main evening programme was
reduced to 30 minutes a year later, while from 25 November 1996 to
September 2001, a half-hour lunchtime edition of London Today was
broadcast on weekdays. In addition to regional news, London News Network
also produced a wide range of regional programming for both Carlton and
LWT as well as providing transmission services for both stations.

Bloomberg Best hosts June Grasso and Willem Marx feature the best
stories of the day from Bloomberg Radio, Bloomberg Television, and over
150 Bloomberg News bureaus around the world on Bloomberg.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 60 minutes

Premier: 2015-06-13

Bloomberg Best - Stephanie Ruhle - Netflix

Stephanie Leigh Ruhle (born December 24, 1975) is an NBC News
correspondent since April 2016 and anchor of MSNBC Live. Previously,
Ruhle was managing editor and news anchor for Bloomberg Television and
editor-at-large for Bloomberg News. Ruhle co-hosted the Bloomberg
Television show Bloomberg GO. Ruhle broke the story of the London Whale,
identifying the trader behind the 2012 JPMorgan Chase trading loss.

Bloomberg Best - Personal life - Netflix

Ruhle resides in Manhattan with her husband and three children. She is
Catholic.

Channel 4 News Summary - Channel 4 News - Netflix

Channel 4 News is the main news programme on British television
broadcaster Channel 4. It is produced by ITN, and has been in operation
since Channel 4's launch in November 1982.

Channel 4 News Summary - Historical roles - Netflix

In 2003, Channel 4 News broke the story of the Dodgy Dossier which led
to a political crisis in Britain. The story of the Conservative Party's
election expenses scandal was first broken, and then pursued for over a
year, by Michael Crick. In March 2018, an undercover investigation by
Channel 4 News explored the campaign activities of Cambridge Analytica.

Though it has "weekend" in the title, this show discusses the week ahead
in addition to offering suggestions for what to do on Saturday and
Sunday. Weather Channel meteorologists Maria LaRosa and Paul Goodloe go
beyond the elements outside and into the realm of lifestyle tips. Each
host has a recurring segment on Weekend Recharge. In Momerolgy,
LaRosa teams with mom bloggers to help parents get a fresh start to each
day; in the Weekend in Play segment, Goodloe explains how the weather is
expected to impact the weekend's scheduled sports action.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 120 minutes

Premier: 2015-03-14

Weekend Recharge - The Weather Channel - Netflix

The Weather Channel is an American basic cable and satellite television
channel, owned by Byron Allen's Entertainment Studios. Its headquarters
are located in Atlanta, Georgia. Launched on May 2, 1982, the channel
broadcasts weather forecasts and weather-related news and analysis,
along with documentaries and entertainment programming related to
weather. A sister network, Weatherscan, is a digital cable and satellite
service that offers 24-hour automated local forecasts and radar imagery.
The Weather Channel's former parent company, The Weather Company (part
of IBM since 2016), also provides forecasts for terrestrial and
satellite radio stations, newspapers, mobile apps and websites,
including an extensive online presence at weather.com. The Weather
Channel continues to license its brand assets and weather data from IBM.
As of January 2016, The Weather Channel is received by 88 million
households in America. Sometime during the week of June 10, 2018, Sling
TV dropped The Weather Channel from their line up per the
cordcuttersnews web site.

Weekend Recharge - Movies - Netflix

In a move that caused controversy with many longtime viewers, The
Weather Channel began airing weather-related movies on Friday nights on
October 30, 2009. The first feature to be broadcast by the channel was
the 2000 film The Perfect Storm. After December 2009, these weekly
movies were discontinued for the time being in favor of running Weather
Center, which already aired throughout primetime during the rest of the
work week. Despite the controversy, the Friday night film block resumed
on March 26, 2010 under the title “Flick and a Forecast,” co-hosted by
The Weather Channel meteorologist Jen Carfagno and MSNBC contributor
Touré, with the documentary Into Thin Air: Deaths on Everest. During the
broadcasts, the Lower Display Line that normally appears on TWC shows to
provide local weather information (with breakaways during forecast and
most long-form programs only for commercial breaks) was removed,
appearing only a few times each hour during the film as a substitute for
the standard “Local on the 8s” segments, with a translucent TWC logo bug
appearing at other times during the film when the LDL was not on-screen.
While the films shown within the “Flick and a Forecast” block were
weather-related in some form, some films featured (such as Misery and
Deep Blue Sea) had only a minimal tie to weather. On May 31, 2010,
NewsBlues reported The Weather Channel's decision to cancel the movie
block, due in part to viewer criticism of movies being shown on what is
intended as a news and information channel, as well as a snafu that
occurred during an April 2010 tornado outbreak that led to a scheduled
movie being aired instead of wall-to-wall severe weather coverage. The
“Flick and a Forecast” presentations were then replaced by an additional
hour of Weather Center and a two-hour block of long-form original
programs.

BBC Weekend News is the national news programmes on BBC One at a
weekend although it is often referred to on guides simply as BBC News,
or if broadcast at 10pm exactly, BBC News at Ten. The programmes are
also simulcast on the BBC News Channel.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: None minutes

Premier: 1954-07-05

BBC Weekend News - BBC News - Netflix

BBC News is an operational business division of the British Broadcasting
Corporation (BBC) responsible for the gathering and broadcasting of news
and current affairs. The department is the world's largest broadcast
news organisation and generates about 120 hours of radio and television
output each day, as well as online news coverage. The service maintains
50 foreign news bureaus with more than 250 correspondents around the
world. James Harding has been Director of News and Current Affairs since
April 2013. The department's annual budget is in excess of £350 million;
it has 3,500 staff, 2,000 of whom are journalists. BBC News' domestic,
global and online news divisions are housed within the largest live
newsroom in Europe, in Broadcasting House in central London.
Parliamentary coverage is produced and broadcast from studios in
Millbank in London. Through the BBC English Regions, the BBC also has
regional centres across England, as well as national news centres in
Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales. All nations and English regions
produce their own local news programmes and other current affairs and
sport programmes. The BBC is a quasi-autonomous corporation authorised
by Royal Charter, making it operationally independent of the government,
who have no power to appoint or dismiss its director-general, and
required to report impartially. As with all major media outlets, though,
it has been accused of political bias from across the political
spectrum, both within the UK and abroad.

BBC Weekend News - Israeli-Palestinian conflict - Netflix

The BBC has faced accusations of holding both anti-Israel and
anti-Palestine bias. Douglas Davis, the London correspondent of The
Jerusalem Post, has described the BBC's coverage of the Arab–Israeli
conflict as “a relentless, one-dimensional portrayal of Israel as a
demonic, criminal state and Israelis as brutal oppressors [which] bears
all the hallmarks of a concerted campaign of vilification that,
wittingly or not, has the effect of delegitimising the Jewish state and
pumping oxygen into a dark old European hatred that dared not speak its
name for the past half-century.”. However two large independent studies,
one conducted by Loughborough University and the other by Glasgow
University's Media Group concluded that Israeli perspectives are given
greater coverage. Critics of the BBC argue that the Balen Report proves
systematic bias against Israel in headline news programming. Daily Mail
and The Daily Telegraph criticised the BBC for spending hundreds of
thousands of British tax payers' pounds from preventing the report being
released to the public. Jeremy Bowen, the Middle East Editor for BBC
world news, was singled out specifically for bias by the BBC Trust which
concluded that he violated “BBC guidelines on accuracy and
impartiality.” An independent panel appointed by the BBC Trust was set
up in 2006 to review the impartiality of the BBC's coverage of the
Israeli–Palestinian conflict. The panel's assessment was that “apart
from individual lapses, there was little to suggest deliberate or
systematic bias.” While noting a “commitment to be fair accurate and
impartial” and praising much of the BBC's coverage the independent panel
concluded “that BBC output does not consistently give a full and fair
account of the conflict. In some ways the picture is incomplete and, in
that sense, misleading.” It notes that, “the failure to convey
adequately the disparity in the Israeli and Palestinian experience,
[reflects] the fact that one side is in control and the other lives
under occupation”. Writing in the Financial Times, Philip Stephens, one
of the panellists, later accused the BBC's director-general, Mark
Thompson, of misrepresenting the panel's conclusions. He further opined
“My sense is that BBC news reporting has also lost a once iron-clad
commitment to objectivity and a necessary respect for the democratic
process. If I am right, the BBC, too, is lost”. Mark Thompson published
a rebuttal in the FT the next day. The description by one BBC
correspondent reporting on the funeral of Yassir Arafat that she had
been left with tears in her eyes led to other questions of impartiality,
particularly from Martin Walker in a guest opinion piece in The Times,
who picked out the apparent case of Fayad Abu Shamala, the BBC Arabic
Service correspondent, who told a Hamas rally on 6 May 2001, that
journalists in Gaza were “waging the campaign shoulder to shoulder
together with the Palestinian people.” Walker argues that the
independent inquiry was flawed for two reasons. Firstly, because the
time period over which it was conducted (August 2005 to January 2006)
surrounded the Israeli withdrawal from Gaza and Ariel Sharon's stroke,
which produced more positive coverage than usual. Furthermore, he wrote,
the inquiry only looked at the BBC's domestic coverage, and excluded
output on the BBC World Service and BBC World. Tom Gross accused the BBC
of glorifying Hamas suicide bombers, and condemned its policy of
inviting guests such as Jenny Tonge and Tom Paulin who have compared
Israeli soldiers to Nazis. Writing for the BBC, Paulin said Israeli
soldiers should be “shot dead” like Hitler's S.S, and said he could
“understand how suicide bombers feel.” According to Gross, Paulin and
Tonge continue to be invited as regular guests, and they are among the
most frequent contributors to their most widely screened arts programme.
The BBC also faced criticism for not airing a Disasters Emergency
Committee aid appeal for Palestinians who suffered in Gaza during 22-day
war there in late 2008/early 2009. Most other major UK broadcasters did
air this appeal, but rival Sky News did not. British journalist Julie
Burchill has accused BBC of creating a “climate of fear” for British
Jews over its “excessive coverage” of Israel compared to other nations.

Marketplace is an award-winning Canadian television series, broadcast on
CBC Television. The series is a consumer advocacy newsmagazine, which
airs investigative reports.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 30 minutes

Premier: 1972-10-05

Marketplace - Silk Road (marketplace) - Netflix

Silk Road was an online black market and the first modern darknet
market, best known as a platform for selling illegal drugs. As part of
the dark web, it was operated as a Tor hidden service, such that online
users were able to browse it anonymously and securely without potential
traffic monitoring. The website was launched in February 2011;
development had begun six months prior. Initially there were a limited
number of new seller accounts available; new sellers had to purchase an
account in an auction. Later, a fixed fee was charged for each new
seller account. In October 2013, the Federal Bureau of Investigation
(FBI) shut down the website and arrested Ross Ulbricht under charges of
being the site's pseudonymous founder “Dread Pirate Roberts”. On 6
November 2013, Silk Road 2.0 came online, run by former administrators
of Silk Road. It too was shut down, and the alleged operator was
arrested on 6 November 2014 as part of the so-called “Operation
Onymous”. Ulbricht was convicted of eight charges related to Silk Road
in the U.S. Federal Court in Manhattan and was sentenced to life in
prison without possibility of parole.

Marketplace - Book club - Netflix

Silk Road had a Tor-based book club that continued to operate following
the initial site's closure and even following the arrest of one of its
members. Reading material included conspiracy theories and computer
hacking. Some of the titles included mainstream books as well as books
such as The Anarchist Cookbook and Defeating Electromagnetic Door Locks.
Most of the titles on this book club were pirated. This book club still
exists as a private Tor based chatroom.

Adam Boulton and Sarah Hewson present the nightly news magazine show. In
each episode the presenters interview the key players making the news
and talk to journalists from around the world for nightly interactive
debates.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Ended

Runtime: 120 minutes

Premier: 2014-09-01

Sky News Tonight - ABC World News Tonight - Netflix

ABC World News Tonight (titled as ABC World News Tonight with David Muir
for its weeknight broadcasts since September 2014 and simply ABC World
News Tonight for its weekend broadcasts) is the flagship daily evening
television news program of ABC News, the news division of the American
Broadcasting Company (ABC) television network in the United States.
Since 2014, the program's weekday broadcasts have been anchored by David
Muir. Cecilia Vega and Tom Llamas rotated as anchors of the Saturday
editions and Sunday editions until Llamas was named sole weekend anchor
in January 2017. The program has been anchored at various times by a
number of other presenters since its debut in 1953. It also has used
various titles, including ABC Evening News from 1970 to 1978, World News
Tonight from 1978 to 2006, World News from 2006 to 2009, and ABC World
News from 2009 to 2014. Since 2014 the program has been called ABC World
News Tonight. As of April 2017, it is in a close ratings race with NBC
Nightly News.

Sky News Tonight - Weekend newscasts - Netflix

ABC first attempted an early evening weekend newscast in July 1975, when
it debuted a Saturday bulletin that was anchored by Ted Koppel and taken
over by Tom Jarriel and Sylvia Chase in 1977. The broadcast, however,
was not carried by many stations, and was cancelled in January 1979.
Following the Saturday news cancellation, and after the flagship
weeknight broadcast became World News Tonight, the program premiered
World News Sunday on January 28, 1979, and expanded to a full seven days
with the restoration of a Saturday newscast (World News Saturday) on
January 5, 1985, years after NBC and CBS had each launched their own
weekend evening news programs. These editions added the word “Tonight”
to the program title in the mid-1990s, further unifying it with the
weekday editions, and in the mid-2000s, their respective names were
shortened uniformly to World News Tonight to correspond with those
broadcasts. However, the original names were restored on July 19, 2006,
concurrent with the retitling of the weekday broadcasts, but the opening
title sequence displayed the name as World News for both the Saturday
and Sunday editions. Prior to 1975, the only network newscasts that ABC
stations broadcast on weekends were 15-minute late-night updates on
Saturdays and Sundays, known as ABC Weekend News and later, ABC News
Weekend Report. The programs were fed to affiliates at 11:00 pm
Eastern/10:00 pm Central and were seen in tandem with the stations' own
late newscasts, although some stations opted to tape-delay the network
updates until immediately before their regular sign-off time (rival CBS
also offered a 15-minute Sunday night bulletin during the 1970s until
1997). Because of declining affiliate interest (in part because of the
proliferation of 24-hour cable news channels such as CNN) and low
viewership, ABC discontinued the late-night weekend reports in September
1991. In addition, starting in 1973, weeknight co-anchor Harry Reasoner
hosted The Reasoner Report, a half-hour topical analysis of important
stories (especially breaking developments in the Watergate scandal) in
the vein of CBS's 60 Minutes, which Reasoner himself co-moderated at two
different times. Affiliates usually carried the program on Saturday
evenings in the time slots where the main newscast aired on weeknights.
The program, which had affiliate clearance problems and was thus
unsuccessful in terms of ratings, ended in 1975, replaced by the
network's inaugural Saturday newscast (see above). Some former anchors
of the weekend news broadcasts include Sam Donaldson (Sunday edition,
1979–1989), Kathleen Sullivan (Saturday edition, 1985–1987), Barry
Serafin (Saturday edition, 1987–1988), Forrest Sawyer (Sunday edition,
1989–1993), Carole Simpson (Saturday edition, 1988–1993; Sunday edition,
1993–2003), Elizabeth Vargas (Saturday edition, 1997–2003; Sunday
edition, 2003–2004), Jim Avila (Saturday edition, 2006–2007), Terry
Moran (Saturday edition, 2004–2005), Bob Woodruff (Sunday edition,
2004–2005), Dan Harris (Sunday edition, 2006–2011) and David Muir
(Saturday edition, 2007–2011; Saturday and Sunday editions, 2011–2014).
Muir, who had taken over World News Saturday in 2007, took over the
Sunday broadcast in 2011, ending the practice of using separate anchors
for the Saturday and Sunday editions of the program, with ABC renaming
both broadcasts as ABC World News with David Muir as a result. David
Muir anchored the weekend program until he took over the weekday
broadcast in September 2014. The program returned to using separate
anchors for the weekend broadcasts afterward, with Cecilia Vega being
named anchor of the Saturday broadcast and Tom Llamas named anchor of
the Sunday edition in February 2015. After Vega was named senior White
House correspondent, Llamas was named sole weekend anchor in January
2017, as the practice of using separate anchors for the Saturday and
Sunday editions ended once again. Some ABC affiliates air the Sunday
edition of World News Tonight at 6:00 p.m. Eastern and Pacific Time
(5:00 p.m. Central and Mountain)‍—‌one half-hour earlier than the
weekday broadcasts. The weekend editions of World News Tonight may
periodically be abbreviated or preempted outright due to sports
telecasts that overrun into its timeslot or occasionally air immediately
following the program (the latter preemption situation commonly affects
stations in the Pacific and Mountain Time Zones); this is particularly
common during fall, as the Saturday broadcast does not air at all from
September through mid December due to ABC's college football coverage
and during the winter and spring, when the Sunday broadcast is sometimes
delayed or preempted due to overruns of the network's NBA telecasts.

UTV brings you comprehensive coverage of the 2017 Westminster elections.
Paul Clark and commentators take an in-depth look at the results across
Northern Ireland.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: In Development

Runtime: 60 minutes

Premier: 2017-06-09

UTV Election Special - 2015 in Irish television - Netflix

The following is a list of events relating to television in Ireland from
2015.

UTV Election Special - December - Netflix

1 December – Shareholders approve the £100 million sale of UTV Media's
television business to ITV. 2 December – RTÉ's Christmas lineup will
include two special episodes of Mrs. Brown's Boys, as well as in-depth
portraits of singer Ed Sheeran, and Niall Horan of One Direction. 3
December – TV3 unveils its Christmas schedule, with highlights including
a Christmas special of The Great Irish Bake-Off, the concluding episode
of Downton Abbey, and The Queen of Ireland's Christmas Message featuring
Panti giving her take on the year's events, while Red Rock will feature
a storyline about the death of a prominent character. Highlights for the
2016 winter season include the return of Celebrity Big Brother and
Doctor in the House. 4 December – RTÉ journalist Teresa Mannion makes a
live broadcast reporting on the progress of Storm Desmond, during which
she is seen being buffeted by gale-force winds and heavy rain. The
footage quickly becomes popular viewing among internet users. 7 December
– Virgin Media Ireland completes its acquisition of TV3. 10 December –
Viewing figures for November indicate that UTV Ireland achieved its most
successful month to date, capturing a 10.3% share of the audience
between 6.30 pm and 11.30 pm, making it the second-most-watched channel
in that timeslot during the month. 10 December – UTV Ireland confirms
that it will not be working on any future projects with broadcaster Pat
Kenny. 12 December – Tony Hanway, CEO of Virgin Media Ireland, hints
that TV3 may expand its coverage area to broadcast in Northern Ireland.
19 December – Boxer Michael Conlan is named the 2015 RTÉ Sports Person
of the Year. 22 December – The Broadcasting Authority of Ireland
approves ITV's £100 million takeover of UTV plc, meaning the deal has
cleared one of the first regulatory hurdles in the Republic. 29 December
– Broadcaster Gay Byrne is taken to hospital after suffering a heart
attack. 29 December – Viewing figures reveal that Mrs. Brown's Boys was
once again the most watched programme over the festive period. Mammy’s
Christmas Punch, aired on Christmas Eve, was seen by 668,400 viewers (a
42% audience share), while Mrs. Brown’s Boys D’Movie was the most
watched programme on Christmas Day, attracting 591,300 viewers (a 38%
share).

HLN Weekend Express - HLN (TV network) - Netflix

HLN (Headline News) is an American basic cable and satellite television
news channel that is owned by CNN. Originally branded as CNN2, and later
CNN Headline News, the channel was originally structured to broadcast a
tightly-formatted 30-minute newswheel 24 hours a day, with freshly
updated information that briefly covered various areas of interest (such
as national news, sports, entertainment, weather and business). Since
2005, however, its format has increasingly shifted to long-form
tabloid-, opinion-, crime-, and entertainment news-related programming.
In 2014, the network further re-focused with an emphasis on social
media, but this practice was dropped by 2016 in favor of focusing more
towards traditional news programming, with the remainder of its lineup
dedicated to true crime programming (drawing heavily from the archives
of defunct sister network Court TV). As of July 2015, HLN is available
to approximately 97 million American households (83.4% of households
with at least one television set) in the United States making it the
most distributed American cable network. Since the mid-2000s, HLN has
been available internationally on cable and satellite in parts of Asia,
the Caribbean, South America, Middle East, North Africa and in Canada.

HLN Weekend Express - Headline Prime, "News and Views" - Netflix

In February 2005, the network launched a new primetime block known as
Headline Prime; the block was designed to feature opinion-driven and
personality-based programs (in contrast to the “hard news” programming
of CNN), which network executive Ken Jautz described as a shift from
“news to views” and The New York Times compared to Fox News Channel. Its
launch lineup featured Prime News Tonight, Showbiz Tonight, a daily
entertainment news show hosted by A. J. Hammer, and an eponymous current
affairs program hosted by legal commentator Nancy Grace, which featured
news and analysis related to crime and court cases. In May 2006,
Headline Prime added a eponymous program hosted by conservative talk
radio host Glenn Beck. Both Nancy Grace and Glenn Beck brought major
ratings gains to Headline News, especially within the key demographics,
although its daytime programming only saw modest increases. Exposed: The
Extremist Agenda, a Glenn Beck special aired in November 2006, broke a
million viewers and was the network's most-watched program of the year.

On December 15, 2008, in conjunction with CNN's own graphics changes,
which resembled the graphics of its sister channel CNN International,
Headline News replaced its news ticker with a “flipper”, which featured
an RSS feed of the current headlines on its parent network's website,
CNN.com. The same day, a new square logo with a triangular appendage
(making it resemble a speech bubble) overlaid by an “HLN” acronym was
introduced, initially alongside the channel's full name. Two days later,
the “Headline News” name was removed from on-air use with the HLN
acronym becoming the channel's name full-time, and a new slogan, “News
and Views”, was introduced On March 28, 2011, HLN switched its primary
standard definition feed from full-screen to a letterboxed 4:3 format,
which is a downconversion from the 16:9 high definition feed; however,
video footage broadcast in standard definition on either feed is not
pillarboxed (as such with parent channel CNN, since its SD feed switched
from full-screen to letterbox in January 2011), leaving black bars on
the right and left sides of the screen, in addition to on the top and
bottom of the screen. However HLN Saturday Night Mysteries, which
features repurposed versions of sister channel TruTV's crime story
programming, is broadcast in 4:3 full-screen on the HLN SD feed. During
the spring of 2011, HLN devoted a significant amount of its broadcast
day to the Casey Anthony murder trial, dedicating multiple daily and
primetime slots to live coverage of the proceedings followed by
commentary during the evening. The saturated coverage of the trial led
to increased ratings for the network, including a doubling in regular
viewership during daytime hours and nearly triple that in primetime. HLN
executive vice president Scot Safon called the trial “a gigantic deal”
for the network. HLN also devoted a significant amount of time to the
trial of Dr. Conrad Murray (who was accused of prescribing the drugs
that caused the death of Michael Jackson) during the fall of 2011. On
July 18, 2011, CNN began offering live streams of HLN for mobile devices
to subscribers of certain pay television services. On November 4, 2011,
HLN launched its own website at hlntv.com. By contrast to CNN.com, the
site is run by HLN's own editorial staff, emphasizing “must see and must
share” stories, and content tying into its television programs. In May
2012, HLN acquired the rights to broadcast the Daytime Emmy Awards,
beginning with the 39th annual event on June 23, 2012; this marked the
first time that the awards ceremony was aired on cable, instead of
broadcast television. With 912,000 viewers (not counting four repeat
broadcasts, which brought the total to two million), the broadcast was
“the most watched regularly scheduled, non-news telecast” ever on HLN.

Naked News, billing itself as "the program with nothing to hide", is
a subscription website featuring a real television newscast. The show is
prepared in Toronto and runs daily, with 25-minute episodes 6 days per
week. The female anchors read the news fully nude or strip as they
present their news segments. Naked News TV is its offshoot pay-per-view
or subscription service. Naked News also aired briefly as a late night
television series on Citytv Toronto.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 25 minutes

Premier: 2014-07-21

Naked News - Naked hiking - Netflix

Naked hiking, also known as naked walking or freehiking, is a
sub-category of the modern form of social nudity, and involves the
undertaking of walking activities while naked.

Naked News - Attention and opinion - Netflix

In the United Kingdom, Stephen Gough, known as The Naked Rambler,
received much media coverage for walking naked from Land's End to John
o' Groats in 2003–2004 and again in 2005–2006. He was arrested and
released several times during both his walks while in England, and was
imprisoned in Scotland. Conversely to Gough's experiences, in 2005 and
2006 the European Alps were crossed naked during a one-week hiking tour,
and there was little media coverage. No one was arrested or troubled,
and there was no police involvement. Most naked hikers report friendly
reactions from people they meet; however, in some countries where such
restrictions exist, the risk of being booked on a charge such as public
indecency is present when hiking in the nude. Some jurisdictions have
regulations formally prohibiting this activity, and can impose fines or
other punishments. A local bylaw to this effect was adopted, for
example, by the 2009 General Meeting (Landsgemeinde) of the residents of
the Swiss canton Appenzell Innerrhoden. In nearby Appenzell
Ausserrhoden, the court of second instance “Obergericht” reinforced an
unpaid fine of 100 Swiss francs for naked hiking and added the court's
cost of another 3330 Swiss Francs.

Start your day with live, breaking news from Canada and around the
world. Heather Hiscox anchors, bringing her unique perspective as one of
Canada's most experienced and tenacious journalists to CBC News Network.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 240 minutes

Premier: 2009-10-26

CBC News Network with Heather Hiscox - CBC News - Netflix

CBC News is the division of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
responsible for the news gathering and production of news programs on
the corporation's English-language operations, namely CBC Television,
CBC Radio, CBC News Network, and CBC.ca. Founded in 1941, CBC News is
the largest news broadcaster in Canada and has local, regional and
national broadcasts and stations. It works closely with, but is separate
from, Radio-Canada Info, the news operations of the French-language
Radio-Canada networks.

CBC News Network with Heather Hiscox - International - Netflix

London, United Kingdom (M) Jerusalem, Israel (M) Beijing, China (M)
Washington, D.C., United States (M) New York City, United States (M) CBC
also uses satellite bureaus, with reporters who fly in when a story
occurs outside the bureaus. In the late 1990s, the CBC and other media
outlets cut back their overseas operations.

Veteran journalist Soledad O'Brien, whose resume includes time at NBC
and CNN, hosts this weekly news magazine that focuses on political and
socioeconomic issues affecting America. Matter of Fact promises to
provide balanced coverage of issues that will impact the future and
discuss what's really going on in the country's political scene. The
program includes interviews with decision makers and people who
influence policy and can help institute changes. O'Brien says her goal
with the show is "to expand the conversation around the issues that
truly matter with those who are most directly able to impact our
everyday lives".

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 30 minutes

Premier: 2016-09-10

Matter of Fact with Soledad O'Brien - The White Stripes - Netflix

The White Stripes were an American rock band formed in 1997 in Detroit,
Michigan. The group consisted of Jack White (songwriter, vocals, guitar,
piano, and mandolin) and Meg White (drums and vocals). After releasing
several singles and three albums within the Detroit music scene, The
White Stripes rose to prominence in 2002, as part of the garage rock
revival scene. Their successful and critically acclaimed albums White
Blood Cells and Elephant drew attention from a large variety of media
outlets in the United States and the United Kingdom, with the single
“Seven Nation Army” which used a guitar and a whammy pedal to create the
iconic opening riff becoming their signature song. The band recorded two
more albums, Get Behind Me Satan in 2005 and Icky Thump in 2007, and
dissolved in 2011 after a lengthy hiatus from performing and recording.
The White Stripes used a low-fidelity approach to writing and recording.
Their music featured a melding of garage rock and blues influences and a
raw simplicity of composition, arrangement, and performance. The duo
were also noted for their fashion and design aesthetic which featured a
simple color scheme of red, white, and black—which was used on every
album and single cover the band released—as well as the band's
fascination with the number three. The band's discography consists of
six studio albums, one live album, two extended plays (EP), one concert
film, one tour documentary, 26 singles, and 14 music videos. Their last
three albums each won the Grammy Award for Best Alternative Music Album.

Matter of Fact with Soledad O'Brien - Works cited - Netflix

Dunn, Brad (2009). When They Were 22: 100 Famous People at the Turning
Point in Their Lives. Andrews McMeel Publishing. ISBN 0740786814.
Handyside, Chris (2004). Fell in Love with a Band: The Story of The
White Stripes. St. Martin's Griffin. ISBN 0312336187.

The 2018–19 Kansas Jayhawks men's basketball team will represent the
University of Kansas in the 2018–19 NCAA Division I men's basketball
season, which will be the Jayhawks' 121st basketball season. The
Jayhawks, members of the Big 12 Conference, will play their home games
at Allen Fieldhouse in Lawrence, Kansas. They will be led by 16th year
Hall of Fame head coach Bill Self. The Jayhawks wiil attempt to extend
their NCAA record Consecutive Conference Championships streak to 15. The
Jayhawks will enter the season with high expectations due to returning
All-Big 12 players Udoka Azubuike and LaGerald Vick, adding three 2018
McDonald's All-Americans, and several transfers coming off their
redshirt years. Following the 2017–18 season, several sports websites
ranked Kansas 1st on their “Way too early rankings” which preview the
next season.

The latest news, sport and weather both nationally and internationally
with Anna Botting.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 60 minutes

Premier: 2016-09-26

Sky News with Anna Botting - Sky News at Ten - Netflix

Sky News at Ten is a long-running daily news show on Sky News, airing
between 10:00pm and 10:30pm. From Monday to Thursday, the show is
presented by Anna Botting, while Anna Jones fronts the programme from
Friday to Sunday.

Insight - Global Insight - Netflix

Global Insight is an economics organization, serving over 3,800 clients
in industry, finance and government, with revenues of over $95 million
(in 2006) and employing more than 600 staff in 23 offices in 13
countries. It is a division of IHS.

Insight - Ownership and management - Netflix

Global Insight was privately held, and founded by Joseph E. Kasputys,
who served as its president and CEO. On September 18, 2008, IHS Inc.
agreed to purchase Global Insight for $200 million.

MSNBC Live with Thomas Roberts provides the latest breaking news stories
as well as details on the biggest stories of the day, the latest
political developments and stories of equality and human rights.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Ended

Runtime: 120 minutes

Premier: 2015-03-02

MSNBC Live with Thomas Roberts - Shift (MSNBC) - Netflix

Shift (stylized as shift by msnbc, formerly msnbc2) was an online
live-streaming video network run by MSNBC. It was launched in July 2014
to provide a platform for original video series which diverge from the
MSNBC television network's political focus.

Access is a daily round-up of the latest showbiz news, gossip and
rumours.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 5 minutes

Premier: 2015-11-23

Access - Random-access memory - Netflix

Random-access memory (RAM ) is a form of computer data storage that
stores data and machine code currently being used. A random-access
memory device allows data items to be read or written in almost the same
amount of time irrespective of the physical location of data inside the
memory. In contrast, with other direct-access data storage media such as
hard disks, CD-RWs, DVD-RWs and the older magnetic tapes and drum
memory, the time required to read and write data items varies
significantly depending on their physical locations on the recording
medium, due to mechanical limitations such as media rotation speeds and
arm movement. RAM contains multiplexing and demultiplexing circuitry, to
connect the data lines to the addressed storage for reading or writing
the entry. Usually more than one bit of storage is accessed by the same
address, and RAM devices often have multiple data lines and are said to
be “8-bit” or “16-bit”, etc. devices. In today's technology,
random-access memory takes the form of integrated circuits. RAM is
normally associated with volatile types of memory (such as DRAM
modules), where stored information is lost if power is removed, although
non-volatile RAM has also been developed. Other types of non-volatile
memories exist that allow random access for read operations, but either
do not allow write operations or have other kinds of limitations on
them. These include most types of ROM and a type of flash memory called
NOR-Flash. Integrated-circuit RAM chips came into the market in the
early 1970s, with the first commercially available DRAM chip, the Intel
1103, introduced in October 1970.

"The New Screen Savers" is a variety show for tech on the TWiT
network. The show stars Leo Laporte and is co-hosted by Megan Morrone,
Jason Howell, Fr. Robert Ballecer, and Bryan Burnett. Viewers get live
tech help, interesting guests, insights into the latest innovations,
products and trends, plus lots of fun things thrown in, too. There will
also be special guest co-host appearances from Patrick Norton, Kate
Botello, Kevin Rose, Martin Sargent, and more.

The New Screen Savers is produced every Saturday and available for
download on your favorite podcast subscription service.

The New Screen Savers - TWiT.tv - Netflix

TWiT.tv, which is the operating trade name of TWiT LLC, is a podcast
network (although TWiT uses the term “netcast”) founded by technology
broadcaster and author Leo Laporte and run by his wife and company CEO
Lisa Laporte. The network began operation in April 2005 with the launch
of This Week in Tech. Security Now was the second podcast on the
network, debuting in August of that year. Currently, the network hosts
18 podcasts and live streaming shows, including The Tech Guy, This Week
in Tech, Security Now, FLOSS Weekly, MacBreak Weekly, and 13 other
podcasts covering various topics including technology companies,
computer security, social networking, Ham Radio and current technology
news. TWiT founder and owner Laporte, in an October 2009 speech, stated
that it grossed revenues of $1.5 million per year, while costs were
around $350,000. In November 2014, American Public Media's Marketplace
reported that TWiT makes $6 million in ad revenue a year from 5 million
TWiT podcasts downloaded each month, mostly in the form of audio, and
that 3,000 to 4,000 people watch its live-streamed shows. On March 18,
2015, prior to the filming of This Week in Google, Leo Laporte stated
that TWiT expects to make $7 million in revenue in fiscal year 2015, and
made “almost” $10 million in revenue in 2016. TWiT gets its name from
its first and flagship podcast, This Week in Tech. The logo design
originated from a traditional logic gate symbol of an “AND gate” turned
on its side. Voiceovers are provided by Jim Cutler.

The New Screen Savers - Programming - Netflix

TWiT's netcasts are centered around technology and technology news.
Hosts of the shows are usually experts in certain fields, either by
working in the field itself or by being a journalist covering the field.
At the beginning of 2014, there were 27 podcasts produced by TWiT, but
that was cut to only 22 shows in 2015. Giz Wiz, Marketing Mavericks and
Padre's Corner were among the shows that were cancelled during the year.
The New Screen Savers was the only new show added to the network in
2015, a show based on The Screen Savers, an American TV show that aired
on TechTV from 1998 to 2005. TWiT further cut their field of
self-produced shows by nearly twenty percent in late 2015. Among the
shows cut were Coding 101, which was replaced with a second weekly
episode of Know How. iFive for the iPhone was cancelled, with some of
that content being folded into iOS Today. Before You Buy was also
dropped, with its last episode being produced on December 18, 2015. With
the departure of news director Mike Elgan in December 2015, TWiT also
cancelled Tech News 2Night. Hosts Megan Morrone and Jason Howell took
over Tech News Today on a daily basis at 4PM each weekday, starting on
January 4, 2016. No new news director has been named. Nathan
Olivarez-Giles was brought in as a co-host and producer in March 2017,
with the prospect of developing new shows including an
automotive-related podcast. By July, no new shows were developed, and
Olivarez-Giles was unceremoniously dropped from the network. Editor Tony
Wang, TD Kara Kohl, producer Tonya Hall and on-air talent Bryan Burnett
were also let go over the summer of 2017. In May 2017, Android App Arena
was also dropped. In October 2017, Home Theater Geeks was canceled and
Know How was changed to a weekly show. Tech News Today was renamed Tech
News Weekly and was changed from a daily to a weekly show.

Banque Internationale Arabe de Tunisie (BIAT) is the largest private
sector bank in Tunisia. It is listed in the Bourse de Tunis.

Bloomberg Markets: Middle East - Overview - Netflix

The Banque Internationale Arabe de Tunisie was founded in 1976, as a
result of a merger of the Tunisian branches of the Société Marseillaise
de Crédit and the British Bank of the Middle East. It is headquartered
in Tunis, Tunisia. It has 185 offices in Tunisia and 1 office in Libya.
It has announced it will open additional branches in Algeria and
Morocco.

"Squawk Box Europe" (since May 2011, billed on-screen as just
Squawk Box) is a television business news programme on CNBC Europe,
aired from 7-10am CET (6-9am WET) each weekday. It also airs on CNBC
Asia between 2.30 p.m.-5.00 p.m. Hong Kong / Singapore time (1.30
p.m.-4.00 p.m. with DST), and in the United States on CNBC World at the
respective time, 1:00 a.m. - 4:00 a.m., ET. The programme is currently
co-anchored by Geoff Cutmore, Steve Sedgwick and Karen Tso. Prior to
June 2003, the programme ran for only two hours, between 7.00 to 9.00 UK
time but later gained an hour from Today's Business.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 180 minutes

Premier: 1998-01-01

Squawk Box Europe - Squawk Box - Netflix

Squawk Box is a business news television program that airs at breakfast
time on the CNBC network. The program is currently co-hosted by Joe
Kernen, Becky Quick, and Andrew Ross Sorkin. Since debuting in 1995, the
show has spawned a number of versions across CNBC's international
channels, many of which employ a similar format. The program title
originates from a term used in investment banks and stock brokerages for
a permanent voice circuit or intercom used to communicate stock deals or
sales priorities; it also may refer to the squawk of a bird, like a
peacock, which is the logo of CNBC.

Squawk Box Europe - 2011–present - Netflix

On July 8, 2011, Quintanilla left Squawk Box to become part of the new
Squawk on the Street anchor team, following Haines' death on May 24 of
that year. His new assignment began three days later, when he debuted
with Melissa Lee and Simon Hobbs. Andrew Ross Sorkin of The New York
Times, joined Kernen and Quick in order to succeed Quintanilla's
anchoring duties. Sorkin made his debut as co-anchor July 18, 2011. On
October 13, 2014, Squawk Box, along with CNBC's other trading-day shows,
were launched in full 1080i high-definition as part of a network-wide
switch to a full 16:9 letterbox presentation on that same day. On
January 7, 2015, Squawk Box moved to a new street-side studio inside the
Time-Life Building in New York City after almost two decades in New
Jersey (at CNBC's original facilities in Fort Lee from its August 7,
1995, debut to October 10, 2003, and at CNBC's facilities in Englewood
Cliffs from October 13, 2003, to January 6, 2015). On January 4, 2016,
Squawk Box debuted a remastered version of its logo used since October
13, 2014. On February 8, 2016, both the Asian and European versions also
started using the remastered Squawk Box logo. On November 14, 2016, it
was officially announced by the NASDAQ that production of Squawk Box
would be relocated to the NASDAQ MarketSite studio in Times Square; it
began broadcasting from there on January 3, 2017. That same studio is
also shared with CNBC's two other shows, Fast Money and Options Action
(the latter airing on Fridays only; both shows are hosted by Melissa
Lee). On November 15, 2017, Squawk Box moved downstairs to a new
street-level studio overlooking Times Square, also at the NASDAQ
MarketSite.

The 2017 United Kingdom general election took place on Thursday 8 June,
having been announced just under two months earlier by Prime Minister
Theresa May on 18 April 2017 after it was discussed at cabinet. Each of
the 650 constituencies elected one Member of Parliament (MP) to the
House of Commons. The governing Conservative Party remained the single
largest party in the House of Commons, but lost its majority resulting
in the formation of a minority government with a confidence and supply
arrangement with the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) of Northern
Ireland. The Conservative Party (which had governed as a senior
coalition partner from 2010 and as a single-party majority government
from 2015) was defending a working majority of 17 seats against the
Labour Party, the official opposition led by Jeremy Corbyn. Under the
Fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011 a general election had not been due
until May 2020, but a call by Prime Minister Theresa May for a snap
election was ratified by the necessary two-thirds supermajority in a
522–13 vote in the House of Commons on 19 April 2017. May said that she
hoped to secure a larger majority in order to “strengthen [her] hand” in
the forthcoming Brexit negotiations. Opinion polls had consistently
shown strong leads for the Conservatives over Labour. From a 21-point
lead, the Conservatives' lead began to diminish in the final weeks of
the campaign. In a surprising result, the Conservative Party made a net
loss of 13 seats with 42.4% of the vote (its highest share of the vote
since 1983), whilst Labour made a net gain of 30 seats with 40.0% (its
highest share since 2001). This was the closest result between the two
major parties since February 1974, and their highest combined vote share
since 1970. The Scottish National Party (SNP) and the Liberal Democrats,
the third- and fourth-largest parties, both lost vote share; media
coverage characterised the election as a return to two-party politics.
The SNP, which won 56 of the 59 Scottish seats at the previous general
election in 2015, lost 21 seats. The Liberal Democrats made a net gain
of four seats. UKIP, the third-largest party in 2015 by number of votes,
saw its share of the vote reduced from 12.6% to 1.8% and lost its only
seat. Plaid Cymru gained one seat, giving it a total of four seats. The
Green Party retained its sole seat, but saw its share of the vote
reduced. In Northern Ireland, the DUP won 10 seats, Sinn Féin won seven,
and independent unionist Sylvia Hermon retained her seat. The SDLP and
UUP lost all their seats. The Conservatives were narrowly victorious and
remained in power as a minority government, having secured a confidence
and supply deal with the DUP. Negotiation positions following the UK's
invocation of Article 50 of the Treaty on European Union in March 2017
to leave the EU were expected to feature significantly in the campaign,
but did not. The campaign was interrupted by two major terrorist attacks
in Manchester and London, with national security becoming a prominent
issue in the final weeks of campaigning.

Bloomberg Markets: European Close is co-hosted by Mark Barton and
Betty Liu who analyze market-moving stories in Europe.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 60 minutes

Premier: 2015-11-09

Bloomberg Markets: European Close - Bloomberg Businessweek - Netflix

Bloomberg Businessweek is an American weekly business magazine published
by Bloomberg L.P. Businessweek was founded in 1929. The magazine was
created to provide information and interpretation about what was
happening in the business world. It is headquartered in New York City.
Megan Murphy was appointed editor of the magazine in November 2016. She
stepped down from the role in January 2017. Joel Weber was appointed in
her place. The magazine is published 47 times a year.

Bloomberg Markets: European Close - Business school rankings - Netflix

Since 1988, Businessweek has published annual rankings of United States
business school MBA programs. In 2006, it also started publishing annual
rankings of undergraduate business programs.

UKIP Conference - Young Independence - Netflix

Young Independence (YI) is the youth wing of the UK Independence Party
(UKIP) and represents all UKIP members aged 30 and under.

UKIP Conference - Controversies - Netflix

In 2013, the YI chairman Olly Neville was fired by the party, reportedly
for supporting same-sex marriage. YI's treasurer Allrik Birch, election
officer Gareth Shanks, Yorkshire chairman Arnie Craven, and the
Yorkshire deputy chairwoman Christina Annesley resigned in protest.
Other party members have come out in support of same-sex marriage,
however, such as the chairman and prospective Parliamentary candidate in
Normanton, Pontefract and Castleford, Nathan Garbutt, questioning
whether Neville really was removed for supporting the issue at hand: “if
he had been removed for favouring gay marriage, the question stands;
‘Why have I not been removed too?’”. Another incident came a few days
later when the YI Northwest chairman and prospective Parliamentary
candidate for Chester Richard Lowe was 'forced to quit' because of a
lack of confidence from the branch over his support for same-sex
marriage and other views that 'clashed with UKIP policy'. During the
first UKIP leadership election in 2016, YI members were accused of body
shaming and attacking one of the candidates, Lisa Duffy. The attacks
supposedly took place in the YI Faculty Facebook group, a closed group
for members. This group was shut down after Huffington Post revealed
alleged racism and homophobic attacks also occurring on the page. On 1
September 2017, Hilton Sheffield cancelled the venue booking for the
Young Independence annual conference citing “heightened safety and
security risks” a day before the conference was due to be held. This
came about after pressure from city councillors over the announced
speaker, Martin Sellner, leader of the anti-migrant Defend Europe, who
was due to speak at the event.. Young Independence said in a statement
that Hilton had stopped the event following threatening emails to staff
sent by Stand up to Racism. It was later theorised that the information
regarding the conference was actually leaked to Unite Against Fascism by
a member of the Young Independence Council, who was helping to organise
the conference. The identity of the individual is still unclear. On 4
January 2018, following the news of UKIP leader Henry Bolton's affair
with Jo Marney, a 25 year old model, Young Independence was forced to
remove and apologise for tweets that they sent congratulating Bolton on
“getting amongst the Youth Wing” and praised media outlets for giving
Young Independence members media coverage. YI chairman, Nathan Ryding,
took heavy criticism from Young Independence and UKIP members for the
tweets but insisted that the tweets were not sent by him or any member
of the Young Independence Council.

This is a list of notable people who follow the straight edge lifestyle.
Straight edge is a subculture and subgenre of hardcore punk whose
adherents refrain from using alcohol, tobacco, and other
recreational/non-prescribed drugs (marijuana, MDMA, LSD, cocaine,
heroin, etc.). It was a direct reaction to the sexual revolution,
hedonism, and excess associated with punk rock. For some, this extends
to not engaging in promiscuous sex, following a vegetarian or vegan
diet, and not using caffeine or prescription drugs.

Asia Edge - List of drug abstainers who do not identify with straight edge - Netflix

This is a list of notable people who refrain from using any kind of
drugs but who have not identified themselves with the straight edge
subculture or term.

Anderson Cooper 360° (commonly shortened to either AC-360 or 360) is
a television news show on CNN, hosted by the American journalist
Anderson Cooper. It is also broadcast around the world on CNN
International. 360° is broadcast live from CNN's Time Warner Center
studios in New York City or on location from the site of a breaking news
event, airing Monday through Friday from 8:00 pm ET to 9:00 pm ET, and
on some nights with a two-hour edition to 10:00 pm ET. It is rebroadcast
Monday through Thursday from 11:00 pm ET to 12:00 am ET, though on
nights with the two-hour live edition shown from 8:00 pm, usually only
the first hour is rebroadcast from 11:00 pm. The program covers a number
of news stories of the day, usually through live or taped reports from
the network's correspondents. The coverage can also include analysis
from experts on the issues, commonly featured in or after the taped
reports.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 120 minutes

Premier: 2003-09-08

Anderson Cooper 360° - Erica Hill - Netflix

Erica Ruth Hill-Yount (born July 20, 1976) is an American journalist who
works for CNN. She serves as a primary substitute anchor and a
correspondent. She co-anchored Weekend Today from 2012 to 2016,
following work at CBS since 2008.

Anderson Cooper 360° - Career - Netflix

Hill began her journalism career in 1998 as a production assistant for
“PC Week Radio”, the online news program for PC Week magazine. During
this time, she also worked as a conference coordinator for the Software
Publishers Association Europe. She worked at TechTV from 2000 to 2003 as
part of the TechTV News program, later named TechLive. From 2000 to
2001, she served as reporter, and from 2001 to 2003, she was co-anchor
and correspondent for the program. She is noted for her live reporting
of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks when she was working for
TechTV.

On All In with Chris Hayes, Chris Hayes delivers impactful stories
that don't always make the front page. Drawing from his background as a
reporter, Hayes goes on the road to uncover the truth by knocking on
doors, digging deeper and speaking with people representing all points
of view.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 60 minutes

Premier: 2013-04-01

All In with Chris Hayes - Ari Melber - Netflix

Ari Melber (born 1980) is an American journalist for NBC News and host
of MSNBC's The Beat with Ari Melber. The show premiered at 6pm ET on
July 24, 2017, and has grown the audience to over 1.4 million average
viewers, which is “MSNBC’s best rating ever for the time slot.”

All In with Chris Hayes - Personal life - Netflix

Melber lives in Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn. He is divorced from Drew
Grant, a pop culture reporter at the New York Observer.

Bloomberg Philanthropies encompasses all of the charitable giving for
founder Michael R. Bloomberg. Headquartered in New York City, Bloomberg
Philanthropies focuses its resources on five areas: the environment,
public health, the arts, government innovation and education. According
to the Foundation Center, Bloomberg Philanthropies is the 12th largest
foundation in the United States. Bloomberg has pledged to donate the
majority of his wealth, currently estimated at more than $49 billion.
Patti Harris is the CEO of Bloomberg Philanthropies.

Bloomberg Markets: European Close - Government innovation - Netflix

Bloomberg Philanthropies supports efforts to make city government more
efficient and innovative. In January 2013, a $16.2 million grant was
awarded to five different cities to establish Financial Empowerment
Centers, which were set up to provide free financial counseling for
low-income individuals. Five U.S. cities split a $24 million Bloomberg
Philanthropies grant to create “Innovation Delivery Teams” – teams
working to streamline municipal government. In August 2014, Bloomberg
Philanthropies invested $45 million for grants to implement Innovation
Delivery Teams in city governments across the United States. In March
2013, Bloomberg Philanthropies announced Providence, R.I. as the winner
of the Mayors Challenge, an initiative intended to foster innovation in
America’s cities. Providence was awarded $5 million for proposing a plan
to overcome a language skills deficit prominent in low-income children.
Houston, Philadelphia, Chicago, and Santa Monica each were awarded $1
million. In September 2014, Barcelona was announced as the winner of the
European Mayors Challenge, and the city was awarded €5 million to help
improve the quality of life for elderly residents. Athens, Kirklees,
United Kingdom, Stockholm, and Warsaw were awarded €1 million each. On
January 20, 2016, Bloomberg Philanthropies launched the 2016 Mayors
Challenge, calling for Latin American and Caribbean cities to submit
government innovation proposals that improve residents’ lives and make
government work better. In November, Mike Bloomberg announced that São
Paulo, Brazil had won the $5 million grand prize for a project that
helped farmers connect to urban markets. Four other cities received $1
million each in the challenge: Medellín and Bogotá in Colombia, as well
as Santiago, Chile and Guadalajara, Mexico. Almost a third of the major
cities in the region competed in the 2016 Mayors Challenge. The next
round of the innovation contest — focusing on American cities — was
announced in June 2017. In April 2015, Bloomberg Philanthropies launched
What Works Cities, a $42 million national initiative to help 100
mid-sized American cities better use data and evidence to improve
government effectiveness and residents' lives. As of March 2016, 27 U.S.
cities were official participants in the program.

Morning Hour is where the U.S. House of Representatives convenes and
the members of the House are permitted to speak on a variety of topics.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 300 minutes

Premier: 2017-07-13

Morning Hour - Prime (liturgy) - Netflix

Prime, or the First Hour, is a fixed time of prayer of the traditional
Divine Office (Canonical Hours), said at the first hour of daylight
(approximately 6:00 a.m.), between the morning Hour of Lauds and the 9
a.m. Hour of Terce. It is part of the Christian liturgies of Eastern
Christianity, but in the Latin Rite it was suppressed by the liturgical
reforms following the Second Vatican Council. However, clergy who have
an obligation to celebrate the Liturgy of the Hours may still fulfil
their obligation by using the Roman Breviary promulgated by Pope John
XXIII in 1962, which contains the Hour of Prime. Like all the liturgical
hours, except the Office of Readings, it consists primarily of Psalms.
It is one of the Little Hours.

Morning Hour - Office of the Chapter - Netflix

So far we have spoken only of the office of Prime properly so called,
which ends like the other Little Hours. It is followed by some prayers
which are called the office of the chapter, and are composed in the
Roman Liturgy of the reading of the martyrology, of a prayer, “Sancta
Maria et omnes sancti” (“May holy Mary and all the Saints...”), a prayer
concerning work, “Respice in servos tuos . . . Dirigere et sanctificare”
(“Look upon thy servants... Direct and sanctify”), and a blessing. This
addition to Prime is a legacy bequeathed by the monks to the secular
clergy. As has been said above, originally after Prime the monks had to
betake themselves to manual work or reading. The office therefore ended
with a prayer for their work “... et opera manuum nostrarum dirige super
nos et opus manuum nostrarum dirige” (“...and direct thou the works of
our hands over us; yea, the work of our hands do thou direct.”), and the
prayer “Dirigere”. Later the reading of the martyrology, the necrology,
the rule, and a prayer for the dead were added. In view of its origin
and constitution, Prime is to be considered as the prayer of the
beginning of the day, whereas Lauds is devoted to recalling with the
dawn the memory of Christ's Resurrection, Prime is the morning hour
which consecrates all the work of the day. Its institution has made the
liturgical day more regular and symmetrical. Prime, until then without
an office, received its psalmody like Terce, Sext, None, Vespers. With
Compline and Lauds, the liturgical day reached the sacred septenary,
“septies in die laudem dixi tibi” (“seven times a day I have given
praise to thee)”, while for the night office there was the text: “media
nocte surgebam ad confitendum tibi” (“I rose at midnight to give praise
to thee”).

In the final run-up to the general election, Noel Thompson hosts a
special debate - in front of a studio audience - featuring
representatives from the five larger Northern Ireland parties.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: In Development

Runtime: 60 minutes

Premier: 2017-06-06

The NI Leaders' Debate - Conflicts between Iglesia ni Cristo and Members Church of God International - Netflix

Since 1980, there have been conflicts between Philippine-based Christian
religious organizations Iglesia ni Cristo (“Church of Christ”, INC) and
the Members Church of God International (MCGI), when MCGI Presiding
Minister Eliseo Soriano started his radio program Ang Dating Daan (ADD).
Through his program, he discussed biblical issues and “exposed” what he
believes to be wrong doctrines of other religious groups, including
those of INC. In 2001, after 21 years of reticence, the INC launched its
own program, Ang Tamang Daan, as a direct response for the first time to
Ang Dating Daan, featuring video footages and recordings of ADD hosts as
issues were tackled. Over time, the animosity between the two groups has
intensified and the relationship has been severely strained.

The NI Leaders' Debate - Current relations - Netflix

After the suspension of Ang Dating Daan and following multiple court
cases, MCGI programs eased in criticizing the INC and slowly started
focusing on general preaching. Soriano went into exile arising from
charges of sexual assault and now teaches abroad devoting his time to
blogging, live podcasting, chatting with his webcast audience, and
answering questions raised during his Bible expositions. The Ang Tamang
Daan in turn changed its format and has since introduced new hosts,
currently focusing on Catholic tradition that are not based in the
Bible.

Primer Impacto (First Impact) is a Spanish-language television
news program broadcast by Univision in the USA weekdays at 5pm ET. A
later program at 11pm ET/PT (Primer Impacto Extra) airs on Univision
affiliates without a local news department (and the national cable
feed), leading into the network's 11:30pm newscast, Noticiero Univision
Edicion Nocturna. The principal anchors are Barbara Bermudo and Pamela
Silva Conde. During the weekends the anchor isNatalia Cruz. Verónica Del
Castillo also replaces anchors and have reporting duties from Mexico
City. Jackie Guerridodoes weather on weekdays and Paola Elorza does
weather on weekends. Felix Fernandez and Fernando Fiore present the
sports segment Republica Deportiva.

Type: News

Languages: Spanish

Status: Running

Runtime: 60 minutes

Premier: 1994-02-14

Primer Impacto - María Celeste Arrarás - Netflix

María Celeste Arrarás (born September 27, 1960 in Mayagüez, Puerto
Rico), better known as María Celeste, is a Puerto Rican broadcast
journalist, author, and television personality. Arrarás was selected for
the cover of “Newsweek” magazine, who named her as one of the “20 Most
Powerful Women” of the next generation of leaders. Arrarás has won three
Emmy Awards for journalism. Currently, Arrarás serves as the host and
managing editor of Al Rojo Vivo con María Celeste, which airs in the
U.S. and in 15 Latin American countries, and has a daily audience of 35
million viewers.

Primer Impacto - Early career - Netflix

Arrarás began her broadcasting career in 1986 when she was employed by a
local Puerto Rican television station, Channel 24, as a news anchor and
reporter. There, Arrarás traveled covering major news events, such as
the fall of the Soviet Union in Moscow and Leningrad, and she received
several journalistic awards for her reports. In 1987 the Univision
affiliate in New York City hired her as the co-anchor of its local news
show.

On the Record with Greta Van Susteren is an American news television
program on the Fox News Channel. The program features news stories of
the day, following the latest information from correspondents on
location and officials related to the issue. Like most networks, the
program also consists of analysis from legal analysts of the network and
the host on the stories it's following. Additionally, the program also
may derail from criminal stories to follow breaking news of the day, as
do other programs on the network. From its debut in January 2002 until
October 4, 2013, the program broadcast live out of Fox News's Washington
studio each weekday at 10:00 p.m. ET and replayed at 1:00 a.m. ET. On
October 7, 2013, the show began airing weekdays at 7:00 p.m. ET.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Ended

Runtime: 60 minutes

Premier: 2002-02-04

On the Record with Greta Van Susteren - Melania Trump - Netflix

Melania Trump (; born Melanija Knavs; [mɛˈlaːnija ˈknaːu̯s], Germanized
to Melania Knauss; born April 26, 1970) is the current First Lady of the
United States and wife of the 45th U.S. President Donald Trump. She was
born in Novo Mesto, and grew up in Sevnica, in the Yugoslav republic of
Slovenia. She worked as a fashion model for agencies in Milan and Paris,
later moving to New York City in 1996. Her modeling career was
associated with Irene Marie Models and Trump Model Management. In 2001,
she became a permanent resident of the United States. She married Donald
Trump in 2005 and obtained U.S. citizenship in 2006. She is the first
naturalized U.S. citizen to become First Lady of the United States.

On the Record with Greta Van Susteren - Early relationship - Netflix

In September 1998, she met real estate mogul Donald Trump at a party
that Zampolli hosted at the Times Square nightclub the Kit Kat Club (now
the Stephen Sondheim Theatre). Trump and Marla Maples had been separated
since May 1997, and he attended the party with Celina Midelfart. When
Midelfart went off to use the restroom, Trump approached Knauss and
asked for her telephone number. She took his phone number instead, and
they subsequently began a relationship and attended the 1990s Greenwich
Village hot spot Moomba. Melania continued her modeling career with her
American magazine cover shoots, including In Style Weddings, New York
Magazine, Avenue, Philadelphia Style, Vanity Fair and Vogue. While they
were dating, her family relocated to New York, where they now live for
most of the year. In 1999, the couple gained attention after an
interview on The Howard Stern Show. When she was asked by The New York
Times what her role would be if Donald Trump were to become President,
she replied: “I would be very traditional, like Betty Ford or Jackie
Kennedy.” In 2000, she appeared with Donald Trump while he campaigned
for that year's Reform Party presidential nomination; she also modeled
for the Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Issue.

A comprehensive round-up of the latest transfer news, with live analysis
of all the major moves.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: None minutes

Premier: 2017-01-31

Transfer Deadline Day - William Carvalho - Netflix

William Silva de Carvalho ComM (born 7 April 1992) is a Portuguese
professional footballer who plays for the Portugal national team as a
defensive midfielder. He spent most of his career with Sporting CP since
making his debut with the first team at the age of 18, going on to
appear in 192 competitive games and win the 2015 Portuguese Cup. A full
international for Portugal since 2013, Carvalho represented the nation
in two World Cups and Euro 2016, winning the latter tournament.

This weekend political discussion show focuses on U.S. history and
American politics and uncovers the backstory to provide context for
events happening in D.C. and across the country.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: None minutes

Premier: 2015-10-10

Up - Set It Up - Netflix

Set It Up is a 2018 American romantic comedy film directed by Claire
Scanlon, written by Katie Silberman, and starring Zoey Deutch, Glen
Powell, Taye Diggs and Lucy Liu. The plot follows two overworked
assistants who try and set up their demanding bosses on dates. The film
was released on June 15, 2018, by Netflix.

Veteran journalist Howard Kurtz is no stranger to criticizing the media.
He did it for 20 years as a media columnist for The Washington Post and
as host of CNN's long-running ``Reliable Sources'' from 1998 through
the first half of 2013. So it's no surprise that shortly after departing
CNN in mid-2013 for rival Fox News Channel he would premiere a show for
his new employer that is modeled after his previous program. In addition
to Kurtz and his weekly panel discussing how the press covers a variety
of topics that include technology, social media, politics and sports,
the host also interviews some of the country's top journalists. And, as
you might expect in these social mediacentric times, MediaBuzz
features some viewers' questions and comments on the show.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 60 minutes

Premier: 2013-09-08

MediaBuzz - Hum Sab Ajeeb Se Hain - Netflix

Hum Sab Ajeeb Se Hain (English: We are all weird) is a Pakistani sitcom
which began airing from 26 October, 2016 on Aaj Entertainment. It stars
Hina Dilpazeer who is playing the central character of Behtareen, along
with Shabbir Jan as his on-screen husband. The show is directed by
Muhammad Iftikhar Iffi. The show is an official adaption of another
popular Pakistani sitcom Family Front, which was telecast in 1990s.

The 2017 election to the Northern Ireland Assembly was held on 2 March
2017. The election was held to elect members (MLAs) following the
resignation of deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness in protest over
the Renewable Heat Incentive scandal. McGuinness' position was not
filled, and thus by law his resignation triggered an election. It was
the sixth election since the Assembly was re-established in 1998, and
the first to implement a reduction in size to 90 MLAs (versus the
previous 108). 1,254,709 people were registered to vote in the election
(26,886 fewer, or a 2.1% decrease, compared to the 2016 Assembly
election). 64.78% of registered voters turned out to vote in the 2017
Assembly election, up 10 percentage points from the previous Assembly
election held in 2016, but 5 percentage points less than in the first
election to the Assembly held in 1998. Eight parties had MLAs in the
fifth assembly: the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), Sinn Féin, the
Ulster Unionist Party (UUP), the Social Democratic and Labour Party
(SDLP), the Alliance Party of Northern Ireland, the Greens, People
Before Profit (PBP), and Traditional Unionist Voice (TUV). There was
also one Independent Unionist MLA.

Northern Ireland Assembly - Northern Ireland Executive - Netflix

The Northern Ireland Executive is the devolved government of Northern
Ireland, an administrative branch of the legislature Northern Ireland
Assembly. It is answerable to the Assembly and was established according
to the terms of the Northern Ireland Act 1998, which followed the Good
Friday Agreement (or Belfast Agreement). The executive is referred to in
the legislation as the Executive Committee of the Assembly and is an
example of a consociationalist government. The Northern Ireland
Executive consists of the First Minister and deputy First Minister and
various ministers with individual portfolios and remits. The main
Assembly parties appoint most ministers in the executive, except for the
Minister of Justice who is elected by a cross-community vote. It is one
of three devolved governments in the United Kingdom, the others being
the Scottish and Welsh Governments.

Northern Ireland Assembly - 2007–2011 - Netflix

Since 8 May 2007, devolution had operated without interruption. The
second Executive formed in 2007 was led by the DUP and Sinn Féin, with
the UUP and SDLP also securing ministerial roles. However, the Executive
did not meet between 19 June 2008 and 20 November 2008 due to a boycott
by Sinn Féin. This took place during a dispute between the DUP and Sinn
Féin over the devolution of policing and justice powers. Policing and
justice powers were devolved on 12 April 2010, with the new Minister of
Justice won by Alliance in a cross-community vote.

News, sport and business reports from around the world as well as the
main news stories from the UK.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 30 minutes

Premier: 2017-01-01

Sky World Review and Business Report - Sky Sports F1 - Netflix

Sky Sports F1 is a television channel created exclusively for Sky's UK
and Ireland coverage of Formula One, with Sky having a package of rights
from the 2012 season to the 2024 season. From 2019 to 2024, Sky Sports
F1 will have the exclusive rights to broadcast Formula 1 live in the UK
and Ireland, and will sub-licence highlights of all races and qualifying
sessions plus the British Grand Prix live on a free-to-air basis. Since
2017, Sky Sports F1 has broadcast Formula 1 in 4K UHD.

Sky World Review and Business Report - Features - Netflix

Sky Sports have a device called the 'SkyPad', used by the likes of
Anthony Davidson and Ted Kravitz. It is used to show highlights and past
features of the race commencing, such as mistakes by drivers. The SkyPad
also has a virtual car which comes out of the screen and is used to
illustrate technical innovations. Unfortunately, the virtual car is no
longer used.

A children's news-magazine programme that has been on air since 1972
with a various range of presenting teams.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: None minutes

Premier: 1972-04-04

Newsround - Sonali Shah - Netflix

Sonali Shah (born 26 July 1980 in Edgware, Middlesex) is a British
newsreader who presented the BBC's children's news programme Newsround
from July 2006 until November 2011. She now occasionally presents the
weekend edition of BBC World News. She currently presents BBC television
programmes including Escape to the Country, The National Lottery Draws
and Crimewatch. She is also a regular reporter on Watchdog.

Newsround - Other - Netflix

On 2 March 2013, Sonali Shah and her Newsround co-presenter Ore Oduba
appeared on the BBC's Let's Dance for Comic Relief, dancing to “Hey Ya!”
by Outkast. They were eliminated, and did not get through to the final.
In 2014, Shah became a presenter of house-buying BBC TV show Escape to
the Country. Since 2015, Shah has presented The National Lottery Draws
and Crimewatch. Both shows are broadcast on BBC One. In August 2016 Shah
covered for sports presenter Matt Williams on BBC Radio 2 during Simon
Mayo Drivetime 3 week summer break

Coverage of Question Time in the Dail and reaction to political
developments.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: None minutes

Premier: 2017-05-24

Leaders' Questions - Animals as Leaders - Netflix

Animals as Leaders is an American instrumental band from Washington,
D.C. It currently consists of guitarists Tosin Abasi and Javier Reyes
and drummer Matt Garstka, having been formed by Abasi in 2007. They are
a prominent band within the djent scene. Prosthetic Records released the
band's eponymous debut album in 2009. They went on to release the albums
Weightless (2011), The Joy of Motion (2014), and The Madness of Many
(2016).

MSNBC delivers in depth coverage and analysis of the 2016 presidential
race.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 60 minutes

Premier: 2015-11-14

The Place for Politics 2016 - Politics - Netflix

Politics (from Greek: πολιτικά, translit. Politiká, meaning “affairs of
the cities”) is the process of making decisions that apply to members of
a group. It refers to achieving and exercising positions of
governance—organized control over a human community, particularly a
state. In modern nation states, people have formed political parties to
represent their ideas. They agree to take the same position on many
issues, and agree to support the same changes to law and the same
leaders. An election is usually a competition between different parties.
Some examples of political parties are the African National Congress
(ANC) in South Africa, the Tories in Great Britain and the Indian
National Congress. Politics is a multifaceted word. It has a set of
fairly specific meanings that are descriptive and nonjudgmental (such as
“the art or science of government” and “political principles”), but
often does carry a connotation of dishonest malpractice. The negative
connotation of politics, as seen in the phrase “play politics”, for
example, has been in use since at least 1853, when abolitionist Wendell
Phillips declared: “We do not play politics; anti-slavery is no
half-jest with us.” A variety of methods are deployed in politics, which
include promoting one's own political views among people, negotiation
with other political subjects, making laws, and exercising force,
including warfare against adversaries. Politics is exercised on a wide
range of social levels, from clans and tribes of traditional societies,
through modern local governments, companies and institutions up to
sovereign states, to the international level. It is very often said that
politics is about power. A political system is a framework which defines
acceptable political methods within a given society. History of
political thought can be traced back to early antiquity, with seminal
works such as Plato's Republic, Aristotle's Politics and the works of
Confucius.

BBC Business Live - BBC News (TV channel) - Netflix

BBC News (also known as the BBC News Channel) is the BBC's 24-hour
rolling news television network in the United Kingdom. The channel
launched as BBC News 24 on 9 November 1997 at 17:30 as part of the BBC's
foray into digital domestic television channels, becoming the first
competitor to Sky News, which had been running since 1989. For a time,
looped news, sport and weather bulletins were available to view via BBC
Red Button. On 22 February 2006, the channel was named News Channel of
the Year at the Royal Television Society Television Journalism Awards
for the first time in its history. The judges remarked that this was the
year that the channel had “really come into its own.” From May 2007,
viewers in the UK could watch the channel via the BBC News website. In
April 2008, the channel was renamed BBC News as part of a £550,000
rebranding of the BBC's news output, complete with a new studio and
presentation. Its sister service, BBC World was also renamed BBC World
News while the national news bulletins became BBC News at One, BBC News
at Six and BBC News at Ten. Across the day the channel averages about
twice the audience of Sky News. The channel is based at and broadcasts
from Broadcasting House in the West End of London. In 2017, it was named
the RTS News Channel of the Year

BBC Business Live - See also - Netflix

List of television stations in the United Kingdom Sky News ITV News
Channel ABC News Channel

On Hardball with Chris Matthews, author and veteran journalist Chris
Matthews hosts a passionate hour of in-depth political analysis and
fiery debate with top politicos and Hollywood icons. Hardball provides
inside-the-Beltway access for all through Matthews' unique, entertaining
style.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 60 minutes

Premier: 1999-01-14

Hardball with Chris Matthews - Crossballs: The Debate Show - Netflix

Crossballs: The Debate Show is a Comedy Central television show which
poked fun at cable news networks' political debate shows, especially
CNN's Crossfire and MSNBC's Hardball with Chris Matthews. In each
episode, comedians posing as experts on a particular subject would
debate two real commentators. The true experts were unaware that the
show was a sham. Topics ranged from reality television to religion to
violence in video games. It debuted on July 6, 2004 and ran for eight
weeks. It aired Tuesday-Friday at 7:30 p.m. ET. The twenty-third and
final episode aired on August 24, 2004. Show number 24 (“Pistol Whipped
America”) was taped but never aired, after one unsuspecting guest named
James March threatened to sue Comedy Central.

Co-anchors Lloyd Robertson and Sandie Rinaldo tell viewers everything
they need to know about current events in this weekly newsmagazine
series, which holds the distinction of being the longest-running news
program of its type in North America, having debuted in 1966.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 60 minutes

Premier: 1966-01-08

W5 - Roewe - Netflix

Roewe is a vehicle marque created by the Chinese automaker SAIC Motor in
2006. Roewe vehicles were initially based on technology acquired from
defunct English carmaker MG Rover. SAIC was unable to purchase the
rights to the Rover brand name (which was bought by Ford instead) and
created the Roewe marque as a replacement. The MG name is preferred in
most markets outside China. Roewe can be considered an indigenous
Chinese luxury vehicle brand name alongside others such as Hongqi.

W5 - Name - Netflix

The name Roewe originates from SAIC's failure to acquire the Rover brand
name from BMW c. 2005 (it was instead sold to Ford in 2006, and the
brand is currently owned by Tata Motors). Composed of the Chinese
characters Róng and wēi, which roughly mean “glorious power”, the name
is a transliteration of Rover, although SAIC has stated that it is
derived from Löwe, the German word for lion. Loewe, pronounced much like
Roewe by Chinese speakers, is also the name of a Spanish manufacturer of
luxury leather goods.

Join Larry Emdur and Kylie Gillies to catch up on all the highlights
from this week's program, including a variety of segments on the latest
news and entertainment.

Type: News

Languages: English

Status: Running

Runtime: 120 minutes

Premier: 2012-03-03

The Morning Show - Weekend - The Morning Show with Mike and Juliet - Netflix

The Morning Show with Mike and Juliet was an American syndicated morning
talk show. Produced by Fox, the show first aired on January 22, 2007, to
a number of markets originally through Fox and MyNetworkTV, most in the
Fox Television Stations Group. Hosted by Mike Jerrick and Juliet Huddy,
the program consisted of celebrity interviews, audience participation,
and segments relating to viewers. The last live show aired on June 12,
2009, with reruns continuing through until September 2009.

The Morning Show - Weekend - Social critiques of hosts - Netflix

Television critics have noted that the program was unique in having two
single hosts, who openly play up their marital status, seemingly
abandoning traditional dictates that television morning hours be limited
to “family values and sanctimony.” Thus, the hosts' on-screen personas
(“a man who, because he loves the ladies too much or not enough, shuns
long-term relationships, and an attractive, over-30 woman who has
pursued her career rather than marrying and regrets it”) are designed to
appeal to single viewers who have previously been uncatered to in the
morning. Jerrick is nineteen years Huddy's senior and has a 30-year-old
daughter from his marriage, while Huddy, who has been married three
times, is currently separated from her third husband after being married
only four months. She does not have children.

NBC News Special Report - Today (U.S. TV program) - Netflix

Today, also called The Today Show, is an American news and talk morning
television show that airs on NBC. The program debuted on January 14,
1952. It was the first of its genre on American television and in the
world, and after 66 years of broadcasting it is the
fifth-longest-running American television series. Originally a weekday
two-hour program from 7-9 a.m., it expanded to Sundays in 1987 and
Saturdays in 1992. The weekday broadcast expanded to three hours in
2000, and to four hours in 2007 (though over time, the third and fourth
hours essentially became their own distinct entities). Today's dominance
was virtually unchallenged by the other networks until the late 1980s,
when it was overtaken by ABC's Good Morning America. Today retook the
Nielsen ratings lead the week of December 11, 1995, and held onto that
position for 852 consecutive weeks until the week of April 9, 2012, when
Good Morning America topped it again. Today maintained its No. 2 status
behind GMA from the summer of 2012 until it regained the lead in the
aftermath of anchor Matt Lauer's departure in November 2017. In 2002,
Today was ranked No. 17 on TV Guide's 50 Greatest TV Shows of All Time.
The entertainment magazine Variety reported the 2016 advertising revenue
during the first two hours of the show was $508.8 million.

NBC News Special Report - Regular panelists - Netflix

The job of “panelist” has no set definition. Panelist duties can range
from conducting interviews to reporting on a number of topics in-studio
and in the field. Regular panelists on the program include the
following: Jack Lescoulie (1952–1965) Edwin Newman (1952–1984) Barbara
Walters (1966–1974; officially titled “co-host” in 1974) Judith Crist
(1964–1973) Joe Garagiola (1967–1973, 1990–1992) Gene Shalit (1973–2010)